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There are 22 Marilyns and 28 Hewitts in the Yorkshire Dales National Park. Topographically, the boundaries of the Yorkshire Dales trace the flow of streams from the lowest points between it and the neighbouring regions of the Lake District, North Pennines, Forest of Bowland, South Pennines and North York Moors.
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The Yorkshire Dales National Park is a 2,178 km 2 (841 sq mi) national park in England which covers most of the Yorkshire Dales, the Howgill Fells, and the Orton Fells. The Nidderdale area of the Yorkshire Dales is not within the national park, and has instead been designated a national landscape .
Wild Boar Fell is a mountain in the Yorkshire Dales National Park, on the eastern edge of Cumbria, England.At 2,323 feet (708 m), it is either the fourth-highest fell in the Yorkshire Dales or the fifth, depending on whether nearby High Seat (2,326 ft or 709 m) is counted or not.
The Yorkshire Three Peaks are some of the highest summits in the area, which became a national park in 1954. The Yorkshire Dales end at the Aire Gap, and a short distance to the south is a range of moorland that rises up between the urban cores of Greater Manchester and West Yorkshire.
The majority of the dales are within the Yorkshire Dales National Park, created in 1954. [1] The exception is the area around Nidderdale, which forms the separate Nidderdale Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The landscape of the Yorkshire Dales consists of sheltered glacial valleys separated by exposed moorland. [2]
Wether Fell (archaically Wetherfell), [2] also known as Drumaldrace (the name of its summit), is a mountain in the Yorkshire Dales National Park, in North Yorkshire, England. Wether Fell is mountain that divides Wensleydale in the north and Upper Wharfedale in the south. Its summit is 614 metres (2,014 ft).
The Met Office confirmed that 40 centimetres (16 in) of snow fell in some parts of southern England. [41] A severe warning issued by the Met Office was in place for every region in the UK. [citation needed] Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond said Scotland was experiencing its worst winter since 1963. [41]