The white cliffs of Dover began eroding at the end of the last ice age, around 10,000 years ago. Before that they were part of a large system of rolling hills made of chalk.
The White Cliffs of Dover face reaches up to 350 feet (110 m).
No.
The material the cliffs are made from is CHALK
Vera Lynn
The White Cliffs of Dover are important to some people, mainly older people, as they represented "home" during the Second World War - as in the wartime song "There'll be bluebirds over, the the white cliffs of Dover". Other people see them as a symbol of an impenetrable defence against increased immigration. It's all in the mind, as chalk cliffs are nothing more than chalk cliffs.
The white cliffs of Dover are so named because they are made of chalk.
The Cliffs of Dover have appeared in hundreds of films.
Check out the White Cliffs of Dover.
The chalk cliffs at Dover.
The White Cliffs of Dover are cliffs forming part of the English coastline. The cliffs reach up to 300 feet in height and stretch for 10 miles to the east and west of Dover.
The White cliffs of Dover reach up to approx. 350 ft or 108 meters.
The White Cliffs of Dover face reaches up to 350 feet (110 m).
They are famous for being white cliffs.
No, they are chalk cliffs and naturally white.
The White Cliffs of Dover are located in Southeast England, along the coastline facing France and the Strait of Dover. They're white because of the chalk in the sediments that formed them.
- There'll Be Bluebirds Over - The White Cliffs of Dover was created in 1941.
The White Cliffs of Dover.