| Archibald Hastie Dick - 1868 - 212 pages
...both mining and agricultural. The mining and manufacturing districts lie to the west of a line drawn from the mouth of the Tees to the mouth of the Exe ; the agricultural and pastoral lie east of that line' The counties of Kent, Surrey, Worcester, and... | |
| James Anthony Froude, John Tulloch - Authors - 1880 - 1436 pages
...and human development into still closer connection within our island. marked off by a line running from the mouth of the Tees to the mouth of the Exe. North-westward of this line we have the whole of Scotland, the Pennine region of England, the Welsh... | |
| Science - 1880 - 922 pages
...secondary and tertiary region. The boundary between them may be roughly marked off by a line running from the mouth of the Tees to the mouth of the Exe. Northwestward of this line we have the whole of Scotland, the Pennine region of England, the Welsh... | |
| American literature - 1880 - 798 pages
...secondary and tertiary region. The bound' ary between them may be roughly marked off by a line running from the mouth of the Tees to the mouth of the ' Exe. North-westward of this line we have the whole of Scotland, the Pennine region of England, the Welsh... | |
| Science - 1880 - 900 pages
...secondary and tertiary region. The boundary between them may be roughly marked off by a line running from the mouth of the Tees to the mouth of the Exe. Northwestward of this line we have the whole of Scotland, the Pennine region of England, the "Welsh... | |
| Horace Bolingbroke Woodward, Edwin Tulley Newton - Geology - 1887 - 704 pages
...red, yellow, and -variegated sandstones, conglomerates, and marls, with occasional beds of limestone. The group forms a conspicuous band, stretching across England from the mouth of the Tees near Redcar and Hartlepool, to the mouth of the Exe, with a branch running to the mouth of the Mersey... | |
| John Clough Thresh - Water - 1896 - 464 pages
...course, unsuitable for domestic use and for most manufacturing purposes. The secondary rocks " stretch across England from the mouth of the Tees to the mouth...with a branch running to the mouth of the Mersey." The lias, new red sandstone, conglomerate sandstone, and magnesian limestone formations yield from... | |
| William Fream - Rocks - 1904 - 198 pages
...sandstones, conglomerates, and marls, with occasional beds of limestone. The group, states Mr. Woodward, forms a conspicuous band, stretching across England from the mouth of the Tees, near Redcar and Hartlepool, to the mouth of the Exe, with a branch running to the mouth of the Mersey,... | |
| Education - 1907 - 688 pages
...between the two, the most convenient line to take as separating these two regions is a curving line from the mouth of the Tees to the mouth of the Exe, following approximately the geological boundary between the Lias and the Oolites. Except that it is... | |
| George Cecil Fry - Geography - 1908 - 442 pages
...scenery, and also to the occupations of the people. The Oolitic Escarpment. 154. A curved line drawn from the mouth of the Tees to the mouth of the Exe (Fig. 48), and slightly convex towards the east, divides England into two regions of distinct character... | |
| |