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Physical landscapes in the UK - glaciers, rivers and relief

The UK has a varied landscape as the relief of the land changes in different parts of the country.

Qasa Alom is in the Peak District looking at the UK's physical landscape.

Relief

refers to the way the landscape changes in height. Upland areas are high above sea level. They are often (but not always) mountainous. Lowland areas are not very high above sea level. They are often flat. The shape of the landscape is largely determined by:

  • rivers
Most of Scotland and Wales has high relief, greater than 200 m above sea level. A small area of eastern England is below sea level.

Upland areas are mainly found in:

  • Scotland - The Northwest Highlands, the Cairngorm Mountains, the Grampian Mountains and the Southern Uplands. Ben Nevis is the UK's highest peak and is found in the Grampian Mountains.
  • England - The Pennines, Lake District, Dartmoor and Exmoor. Scafell Pike is the highest mountain in England and is found in the Lake District.
  • Wales - Snowdonia and the Brecon Beacons. Snowdon is the highest mountain in Wales and is found in Snowdonia.

Lowland areas can be found in the following places:

  • around The Wash (East Anglia and Lincolnshire)
  • Lincolnshire
  • the Fens in East Anglia - the lowest place in the UK
  • the Midlands
  • the London Basin
  • the Vale of York

The role of glaciers in shaping the land

During the last , ice covered a large part of the UK. This ice eroded the land producing some of the mountainous landscapes which exist today.

Glaciated upland areas in UK: Snowdonia (North Wales), Lake District/Cumbrian Mountains (North England), Loch Lomond and The Trossachs, Grampian Mountains/Cairngorns, North West Highlands (Scotland).