Hensbarrow
Hensbarrow is a natural region in the county of Cornwall, England, UK, that has been recognized as National Character Area 154 by Natural England.
Geography
Hensbarrow is an upland region covering an area of just under 12,000 hectares immediately north of St Austell. It is bounded in the north by the A30 road and runs from Retew and Treviscoe in the west to Redmoor and Penpillick in the east. It is the remnant of a much larger exposed and windswept heather moorland. Its lower, more sheltered areas are covered by irregular livestock fields enclosed by Cornish hedges of stone walls, with scattered hamlets and farmsteads. China clay pits, sand tips and mica dams occupy much of the central area. Its highest point is Hensbarrow Beacon (1025 ft).[1][2]
gollark: A happy accident of timings if anything happens which it probably won't.
gollark: I'm prepared, coincidentally, with three spare slots.
gollark: It's useless because nobody knows what you want.
gollark: Also, the wants thing is a bit different, because if you don't fill it in your trade is useless anyway.
gollark: I don't know who they are anyway...
References
- Hensbarrow at www.naturalengland.org.uk. Accessed on 2 Sep 2013
- NCA 154: Hensbarrow. Key Facts & Data. at www.naturalengland.gov.uk. Accessed on 2 Sep 2013
Further reading
- Collins, Joseph Henry The Hensbarrow Granite District, 1878, republished 1992, ISBN 0-9519419-1-7
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.