There are 51 Mountains in the Lake District.
Well the tallest is scarfell pike. Sorry can`t find any others! ;)
The tallest mountain in Lake District which is Scafell Pike, well that is 3,209ft tall. (278 metres tall)
Scafell pike is the highest point in the Lake district. It is also the highest point in England. Height is 3,209 ft (978 metres).
1000356 feet high
lake district
Yes there are, but it depends how you define mountain. According to the ramblers Association there are 248 mountains in the lake District with Scafell Pike being the highest at 978 metres. The four tallest mountains in the lake district are Scafell Pike, Scafell, Helvellyn, and Skiddaw, all of which are well over 900 m (3,000 ft).
STEPHEN HEBRON has written: 'SOLITUDE OF MOUNTAINS: CONSTABLE AND THE LAKE DISTRICT'
you have to make a rainbow in maple lake district and cross it to get to the mountains
The Cuillin (on Skye, and island off Scotland) Monadhliath Mountains (Scotland) Grampian Mountains (Scotland) Cairngorm Mountains (Scotland) Cambrian Mountains (Wales) - The Brecon Beacons - Snowdonia The Pennines (England) The Lake District (England) The Peak District (England)
no, the lake district is in cumbria ... but you can drive to the outskirts of the Lake District (Ullswater) in about an hour from Newcastle!
Lake District was created in 1951.
No. The Lake District is a district.
There are mountains in England. The tallest one is Scafell pike which is 978 m high. It is located in Lake District National Park in Cumbria. There are plenty of rivers in England, but no deserts.
Weber School District is located in Weber County in northern Utah in the United States of America, between the Great Salt Lake and the Rocky Mountains.
The Lake district (in Cumbria, England) is a natural phenomenon and has been called the "Lake District" because it has many lakes since ancient times. The "Lake District National Park" was established 1951 to protect the environment of the Lake District.
The lake distict is bigger.