When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Limestone pavement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limestone_pavement

    A limestone pavement is a natural karst landform consisting of a flat, incised surface of exposed limestone that resembles an artificial pavement. [1] The term is mainly used in the UK and Ireland, where many of these landforms have developed distinctive surface patterning resembling paving blocks. [ 2 ]

  3. Glass's Guide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass's_Guide

    Glass's Guide is the leading British motor trades guide to used car prices, often referred to in the trade as "the bible". Monitoring car values since 1933, it reflects how cars have become increasingly affordable – the £145 list price for a Ford 10 De Luxe (including £5 for an optional sliding roof) was the equivalent of almost two years' salary.

  4. Stancombe Quarry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stancombe_Quarry

    The quarry which is operated by Tarmac produces Carboniferous Limestone, which is mainly for use on the roads, [1] after crushing on site. [2] The site has an expected output of 28 million tonnes over a 25-year period. [3] In 1999 the car park at the quarry was used as a test site for a porous asphalt pavement. [4]

  5. Geology of Yorkshire Dales National Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geology_of_Yorkshire_Dales...

    The solubility of the limestone in weakly acidic water has resulted in the development of a wide range of surface karst features such as limestone pavements, dry valleys, sinkholes and resurgences along with very extensive cave networks including the Three Counties System which, with over 86km of known passage, is the longest in the UK. [9]

  6. Ribblehead Quarry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ribblehead_Quarry

    In 1998, ARC announced it would cease quarrying completely at the site, leaving behind possible reserves of 2,300,000 tonnes (2,500,000 tons) of limestone and limestone pavement. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] In 2000, the former Ribblehead Quarry site became part of the Ingleborough National Nature Reserve. [ 12 ]

  7. Warton Crag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warton_Crag

    Warton Crag is a limestone hill in north west Lancashire, England. It lies to the north west of Warton village, in City of Lancaster district. At 163 metres (535 ft) it is the highest point in the Arnside and Silverdale Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty , [ 1 ] and is listed as a " HuMP " or "Hundred Metre Prominence", having a "drop" or ...

  8. Auto Trader Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auto_Trader_Group

    In 2022, Auto Trader began a partnership with the Office for National Statistics sharing its used car pricing data to power its official measures of inflation, including the Consumer Prices Index. [28] Also in 2022, Auto Trader acquired Autorama, owner of Vanarama, one of the UK’s largest transactional marketplaces for leasing new vehicles. [29]

  9. Geology of England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geology_of_england

    The formation of Carboniferous Limestone was followed by the deposition of dark marine shales, siltstones and coarse sandstones of the Millstone Grit, notably in the area later uplifted to form the Pennine anticline. This sequence can be seen in the Yorkshire Dales with Ingleborough protruding up above the Carboniferous Limestone landscape below.