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Norfolk Wherry "Hathor" The Wherry Yacht Charter Charitable Trust (WYC) is a waterway society and registered charity number 1096073, on the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads in East Anglia, England, UK. They operate and charter 5 historic wherries, [1] those boats being 5 of the 8 remaining wherries. [2]
Wroxham is a village and civil parish in the English county of Norfolk. The civil parish of Wroxham has an area of 6.21 square kilometres, and in 2001, had a population of 1,532 in 666 households. The civil parish of Wroxham has an area of 6.21 square kilometres, and in 2001, had a population of 1,532 in 666 households.
Only a couple of models in the company’s history have ever been built outside the UK. These are the Oyster 49, Oyster 54 and LD43 [ 6 ] parts of the production run was produced in New Zealand by McDell Marine [ 7 ] and the 100 ft and 125 ft yachts designed by Ed Dubois built at RMK Marine in Turkey .
The Cromer Shoal Chalk Beds are a chalk reef off the coast Norfolk in the United Kingdom, believed to be the largest chalk reef in Europe. [1] Since January 2016, an area around it has been designated as a Marine Conservation Zone. [1] Although the MCZ is named after chalk beds off Cromer the most dramatic features are off Sheringham.
It was built in the churchyard of St Mary the Virgin, Wroxham. [4] Salvin exhibited the design at the Royal Academy in 1830. [4] The style is Early English Gothic, [4] described in the Norfolk 1: Norwich and the North-East volume of Pevsner as a; "correct, rather cold later 13th century style". [5] The mausoleum is a Grade II listed structure. [4]
Wroxham Broad is an area of open water alongside the River Bure near the village of Wroxham in Norfolk, England within The Broads National Park. The Norfolk Broads were formed by the flooding of ancient peat workings. Wroxham Broad has an area of 34.4 hectares (85 acres) and a mean depth of 1.3 metres.
The River Bure is a river in the county of Norfolk, England, most of it in the Broads. [1] The Bure rises near Melton Constable, 11 miles (18 km) upstream of Aylsham, which was the original head of navigation. Nowadays, the head of navigation is 10 miles (16 km) downstream at Coltishall Bridge.
As the Norwich Crag is a marine formation, the majority of fossils found in it are of marine origin; any terrestrial species were originally blown or washed into it from land, or derived from earlier deposits, particularly the Red Crag. [33] Vertebrate fossils tend to be concentrated in the basement bed [2] [14] [33] or in gravel lags. [34]