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Great Britain topographic map

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Great Britain topographic map, elevation, terrain

Great Britain topographic map, elevation, terrain

About this map

Name: Great Britain topographic map, elevation, terrain.

Location: Great Britain, United Kingdom (49.95870 -6.22788 58.67208 1.76322)

Average elevation: 52 m

Minimum elevation: -6 m

Maximum elevation: 1,233 m

Routes: United Kingdom GPS tracks, routes, trails, hikes

Other topographic maps

Click on a map to view its topography, its elevation and its terrain.

England

United Kingdom

Average elevation: 55 m

London

United Kingdom > England > London

Average elevation: 42 m

Wales

United Kingdom

Much of Wales' diverse landscape is mountainous, particularly in the north and central regions. The mountains were shaped during the last ice age, the Devensian glaciation. The highest mountains in Wales are in Snowdonia (Eryri), of which five are over 1,000 m (3,300 ft). The highest of these is Snowdon (Yr…

Average elevation: 99 m

London

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 66 m

Edinburgh

United Kingdom > Scotland > Edinburgh

Some have called Edinburgh the Athens of the North for a variety of reasons. The earliest comparison between the two cities showed that they had a similar topography, with the Castle Rock of Edinburgh performing a similar role to the Athenian Acropolis. Both of them had flatter, fertile agricultural land…

Average elevation: 104 m

Scotland

United Kingdom

A significant exception to the above are the fossil-bearing beds of Old Red Sandstones found principally along the Moray Firth coast. The Highlands are generally mountainous and the highest elevations in the British Isles are found here. Scotland has over 790 islands divided into four main groups: Shetland,…

Average elevation: 36 m

Suffolk

United Kingdom > England

The west of the county lies on more resistant Cretaceous chalk. This chalk is responsible for a sweeping tract of largely downland landscapes that stretches from Dorset in the south west to Dover in the south east and north through East Anglia to the Yorkshire Wolds. The chalk is less easily eroded so forms…

Average elevation: 35 m

Bristol

United Kingdom > England > City of Bristol

Average elevation: 55 m

Sheffield

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 168 m

Kent

United Kingdom > England

Kent was also the location of the largest number of art schools in the country during the nineteenth century, estimated by the art historian David Haste, to approach two hundred. This is believed to be the result of Kent being a front line county during the Napoleonic Wars. At this time, before the invention…

Average elevation: 37 m

Nottingham

United Kingdom > England > Nottinghamshire

Average elevation: 56 m

Leeds

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 96 m

Northern Ireland

United Kingdom

Average elevation: 79 m

City of Edinburgh

United Kingdom > Scotland

Edinburgh has been popularly called the Athens of the North since the early 19th century. References to Athens, such as Athens of Britain and Modern Athens, had been made as early as the 1760s. The similarities were seen to be topographical but also intellectual. Edinburgh's Castle Rock reminded returning…

Average elevation: 118 m

Greater Manchester

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 141 m

Folkestone

United Kingdom > England > Folkestone

Average elevation: 46 m

York

United Kingdom > England > York

Average elevation: 21 m

East of England

United Kingdom > England

The East of England region has the lowest elevation range in the UK. Twenty percent of the region is below mean sea level, most of this in North Cambridgeshire, Norfolk and on the Essex Coast. Most of the remaining area is of low elevation, with extensive glacial deposits. The Fens, a large area of reclaimed…

Average elevation: 39 m

Norfolk

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 23 m

Salisbury

United Kingdom > England > Salisbury

Bishop of Salisbury Hubert Walter was instrumental in the negotiations with Saladin during the Third Crusade, but he spent little time in his diocese prior to his elevation to archbishop of Canterbury. The brothers Herbert and Richard Poore succeeded him and began planning the relocation of the cathedral into…

Average elevation: 96 m

Cambrian Mountains

United Kingdom > Wales > Powys

Average elevation: 319 m

South East England

United Kingdom > England

Near Weybridge are the UK headquarters of Sony with SSP Group (situated in Byfleet) and Procter & Gamble (next door to each other on The Heights Business Park near the former Brooklands racing circuit) with Kia Motors UK and Petroleum Geo-Services UK, and Gallaher Group (cigarettes) is to the north, next to…

Average elevation: 69 m

Derbyshire

United Kingdom > England

Due to its central location in England and altitude range from 27 metres in the south to 636 metres in the north, Derbyshire contains many species at the edge of their UK distribution ranges. Some species with a predominantly northern British distribution are at the southern limit of their range, whilst others…

Average elevation: 144 m

Berkshire

United Kingdom > England > West Berkshire

All of the county is drained by the Thames. Berkshire divides into two topological (and associated geological) sections: east and west of Reading. North-east Berkshire has the low calciferous (limestone) m-shaped bends of the Thames south of which is a broader, clayey, gravelly former watery plain or belt from…

Average elevation: 100 m

Manchester

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 66 m

Hebden Bridge

United Kingdom > England > Calderdale

Average elevation: 277 m

Wrexham

United Kingdom > Wales > Wrexham

Average elevation: 139 m

Chelmsford

United Kingdom > England > Essex

Average elevation: 54 m

Glasgow

United Kingdom > Scotland > Glasgow City

Glasgow itself was reputed to have been founded by the Christian missionary Saint Mungo in the 6th century. He established a church on the Molendinar Burn, where the present Glasgow Cathedral stands, and in the following years Glasgow became a religious centre. Glasgow grew over the following centuries. The…

Average elevation: 128 m

Brompton

United Kingdom > England > North Yorkshire

Average elevation: 91 m

Ealing

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 26 m

Falmouth

United Kingdom > England > Falmouth

Average elevation: 33 m

Margate

United Kingdom > England > Kent > Thanet

Average elevation: 22 m

Redditch

United Kingdom > England > Worcestershire

Average elevation: 99 m

St Albans

United Kingdom > England > Hertfordshire > St Albans

St Albans was an ancient borough created following the dissolution of the monastery in 1539. It consisted of the ancient parish of St Albans (also known as the Abbey parish) and parts of St Michael and St Peter. The municipal corporation was reformed by the Municipal Corporations Act 1835 and the boundary was…

Average elevation: 100 m

Mansfield

United Kingdom > England > Nottinghamshire

Average elevation: 117 m

Lancashire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 153 m

Cambridge

United Kingdom > England > Cambridgeshire

The city, like most of the UK, has a maritime climate highly influenced by the Gulf Stream. Located in the driest region of Britain, Cambridge's rainfall averages around 570 mm (22.44 in) per year, around half the national average, The driest recent year was in 2011 with 380.4 mm (14.98 in) of rain at the…

Average elevation: 18 m

Wirral

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 21 m

Dartmoor National Park

United Kingdom > England > Devon

Rainfall tends to be associated with Atlantic depressions or with convection. In summer, convection caused by solar surface heating sometimes forms shower clouds and a large proportion of rainfall falls from showers and thunderstorms at this time of year. The wettest months are November and December and on the…

Average elevation: 239 m

Dunfermline

United Kingdom > Scotland > Fife > Dunfermline

Average elevation: 80 m

Southampton

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 22 m