Британские острова
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The British Isles consist of two main islands: Great Brit¬ain and Ireland. These and over five hundred small islands are known collectively as the United Kingdom of Great Brit¬ain and Northern Ireland. Their total area is some 94, 250 square miles. Great Britain proper comprises Eng¬land, Wales and Scotland. The southern part of the isle of Ireland is the Irish Republic (or Eire).
Britain is comparatively small, but there is hardly a coun¬try in the world where such a variety of scenery can be found in so small a compass. There are wild desolate moun-tains in the northern Highlands of Scotland — the home of the deer and the eagle — that are as lonely as any in Norway.
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The British Isles
The British Isles consist of two
main islands: Great Brit¬ain and Ireland. These and over five hundred
small islands are known collectively as the United Kingdom of Great
Brit¬ain and Northern Ireland. Their total area is some 94, 250
square miles. Great Britain proper comprises Eng¬land,
Wales and Scotland. The southern part of the isle of Ireland is the
Irish Republic (or Eire).
Britain is comparatively small, but
there is hardly a coun¬try in the world where such a variety of scenery
can be found in so small a compass. There are wild desolate moun-tains
in the northern Highlands of Scotland — the home of the deer and the
eagle — that are as lonely as any in Norway. There are flat tulip fields round
the Fens — a blaze of colour in spring, that would make you think
you were in Hol¬land. Within a few miles of Manchester and Sheffield
you can be in glorious heather-covered moors.
Once the. British Isles were part
of the mainland of Eu¬rope — the nearest point is across the Strait
of Dover, where the chalk cliffs of Britain are only twenty-two miles
from those of France.
The seas round the British Isles
are shallow. The North Sea is nowhere more than
600 feet deep, so that if St. Paul's Cathedral were put down in any
part of it some of the ca-thedral would still be above water. This shallowness
is in some ways an advantage. Shallow water is warmer than deep water
and helps to keep the shores from extreme cold. It is, too, the home
of millions of fish, and more than a million tons are caught every year.
You have noticed on the map how deeply
indented the coast line is. This indentation gives a good supply of
splen¬did harbours for ships; and you will note, too, that owing to
the shape of the country there is no point in it that is more than seventy
miles from the sea — a fact that has greatly fa¬cilitated the export
of manufactures and has made the En¬glish race a sea-loving one.
On the north-west the coasts are
broken by high rocky cliffs. This is especially noticeable in north-west
Scotland, where you have long winding inlets (called "lochs")
and a great many islands. Western Scotland is fringed by the large island
chain known as the Hebrides, and to the north east of the Scottish mainland
are the Orkney and Shetland Islands.
In Scotland you have three distinct
regions. There is, firstly, the Highlands, then there is the central
plain or Low¬lands. Finally there are the southern uplands, "the
Scott country," with their gently rounded hills where the sheep
wander. Here there are more sheep to the square mile than anywhere in
the British Isles.
In England and Wales all the high
land is in the west and north-west. The south-eastern plain reaches
the west coast only at one or two places — at the Bristol Channel
and by the mouths of the rivers Dee and Mersey.
In the north you find the Cheviots
separating England from Scotland, the Pennines going down England like
a backbone and the Cumbrian mountains оf thе Lake District, one of
the loveliest (and the wettest) parts of England. In the west are the
Cambrian mountains which occupy the greater part of Wales.
The south-eastern part of England
is a low-lying land with gentle hills and a coast which is regular in
outline, sandy or muddy, with occasional chalk cliffs, and inland a
lovely pat¬tern of green and gold — for most of England's wheat is
grown here — and brown plough-land with pleasant farms and cottages
in their midst. Its rich brown soil is deeply culti¬vated — much
of it is under wheat; fruit-growing is exten¬sively carried on. A quarter
of the sugar used in the country comes from sugar-beet grown there,
but the most important crop is potatoes.
The position of the mountains naturally
determined the direction and length of the rivers, and the longest rivers,
ex¬cept the Severn and Clyde, flow into the North Sea, and even the
Severn flows eastward or south-east for the greater part of its length.
The rivers of Britain are of no great
value as water-ways — the longest, the Thames, is a little over 200
miles — and few of them are navigable except near the mouth for anything
but the smaller vessels.
In the estuaries of the Thames, Mersey,
Tyne, Clyde, Tay, Forth and Bristol Avon are some of the greatest ports.
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