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The River Blyth flows eastwards through southern Northumberland into the North Sea at the town of Blyth. It flows through Plessey Woods Country Park. [2] The River Pont is a tributary. The Blyth is 27 miles (44 km) long and the Pont is 17 miles (28 km). [3] The tidal limit of the river is at Bebside. The estuary widens from this point eastwards ...
Blyth (/ ˈ b l aɪ ð /) is a port and seaside town as well as a civil parish in southeast Northumberland, England. It lies on the coast, to the south of the River Blyth. It has a population of 39,731 as of the 2021 census, up 6% from the 2011 census and population of 37,347. [2]
Cambois (/ ˈ k æ m ə s / KAM-əs) is a village in south-east Northumberland, England. [1] [2] It is situated on the north side of the estuary of the River Blyth between Blyth and Ashington on the North Sea coast.
Plessey Woods is a country park situated on the north bank of the River Blyth, in Northumberland. The park is accessed from the A192 in the village of Hartford Bridge, north of Cramlington and south west of Bedlington. In 2016 charity Leading Link opened a youth-run Art Trail around Plessey Woods.
The North Blyth Biomass Project was a proposed biomass-fired power station planned to be located at North Blyth, Northumberland on the north bank of the River Blyth near its tidal estuary. When commissioned it would have had a generating capacity of 100 megawatts , enough electricity to provide for 170,000 homes. [ 1 ]
Horton is a former civil parish, now in the parish of Blyth, in Northumberland, England, about 2 miles (3 km) west of Blyth, and south of the River Blyth.Historically a chapelry of Woodhorn, [1] it became part of Blyth Urban District in 1912, and on 1 April 1920 it was abolished, when it was combined with Bebside, Cowpen, and Newsham and South Blyth to form a single parish for the district. [2]
A planning application for the proposed new station at Bebside was submitted to Northumberland County Council on 5 March 2021. [27] The submitted planning documents indicate that the station will be located approximately 200 metres (220 yd) to the south of the original one, [28] where the line passes through a cutting. [29]
Blyth Valley was a local government district with borough status in south-east Northumberland, England, bordering the North Sea and Tyne and Wear. The two principal towns were Blyth and Cramlington. Other population centres include Seaton Delaval, and Seaton Sluice.