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View from the Bluestone Heath Road, September 2005. Bluestone Heath Road near Dog Hill. The Bluestone Heath Road is an ancient route and ridgeway across the Lincolnshire Wolds in Lincolnshire, England. [1] [2] The surviving parts are somewhat fragmented in places, but many still bear the name.
Wolds Top, also known as Normanby Hill, [2] is the highest point of the Lincolnshire Wolds.The summit elevation is 168 m (551 ft). [1] It lies just under a mile to the north of the village of Normanby le Wold and three miles to the south of the small market town of Caistor in Lincolnshire.
The Lincolnshire Wolds which also includes the Lincolnshire Wolds National Landscape are a range of low hills in the county of Lincolnshire, England which runs roughly parallel with the North Sea coast, from the Humber Estuary just west of the town of Barton-upon-Humber in North Lincolnshire which then runs in a south easterly direction towards the flat Lincolnshire Fens in the south-east of ...
Normanby le Wold is a village and civil parish in the West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England.It is in the Lincolnshire Wolds, an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, and about 5 miles (8.0 km) south from the town of Caistor, and 17 miles (27 km) north-east from the city and county town of Lincoln. [1]
Stenigot is a village in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. It is in the Lincolnshire Wolds, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, about 6 miles (9.7 km) south-west from the town of Louth, and 1 mile (1.6 km) south-east from the village of Donington on Bain. It includes the hamlet of Cold Harbour. [1]
The Lincolnshire Wolds from Hoe Hill near Fulletby. East Lindsey has an area of 1,760 km 2, making it the 13th largest district (and largest non-unitary district) in England. It borders North Lincolnshire and North East Lincolnshire to the North, the North Sea to the east, Boston to the south, and North Kesteven and West Lindsey, to the west.
The Lincolnshire Wolds: a range of low hills that run broadly south-east through the central and eastern portion of the county. The Lincoln Cliff: a jurassic escarpment forming a major feature facing the Wolds. The industrial Humber Estuary and north-east coast: the major population and industrial centres of North and North East Lincolnshire.
Hubbard's Hills is a glacial overspill channel formed as the last ice age ended about 40,000 years ago. A marginal lake of meltwater trapped between glacial ice sheet and the Lincolnshire Wolds poured over a chalk ridge and gouged a 125-foot-deep (38 m), steep-sided valley.