dales
Except for the river valleys, all of it.
Wallabies do not live in the desert, and therefore do not need to adapt to desert life. Wallabies live primarily in scrub and open bushland, or in rocky, hilly areas.
The province of Leinster in Ireland has various land forms. There are open areas, flat areas, mountains, lakes, valleys, rivers, bog land and other types.
Very varied. We have all sorts of landscape, from miles of flat plains of East Anglia to very hilly areas such as the Peak District and Lake District. We have wide, flat river valleys with slow-flowing rivers near the coasts and steep gorges with fast flowing rivers in the hills and mountains. But the UK is a relatively small country, so nothing is on the scale of the Alps of Europe or the prairies of the US.
there are no such things only V shaped valleys which have sides sloping down to a river that has cut the valley out of the rock and U shaped valleys with flat bottoms and steep sides. these have been carved out by glaciers
Valleys are low-lying areas of land between two higher elevation points, often carved out by rivers or glaciers. They can vary in size from small and narrow to large and broad. Valleys are important ecological habitats, providing a variety of plant and animal species with unique environments to thrive in.
"Wold" is a noun meaning an upland area of open country or a hilly or rolling region. It is no longer in common use but remains as part of the names of some geographic areas in England, "the Yorkshire Wolds" for example.
Because there was lots more grass to graze than in other areas. Cattle could the stocked more on the open plains than in forested or very hilly areas. Also, the expansion of railroads helped the cattles move west.
Public areas are areas that are open to the public. Private areas are areas that are not open to the public.
No. The Giant Wombat, better known as the Diprotodon, preferred more open country. Fossil evidence indicates that it inhabited semi-arid plains, savannahs and open woodlands. Fossils have not been located in hilly terrain or in forested coastal regions, or in areas at were once rainforests.
The River Thames flows through open countryside and urban areas - like Oxford and London. It doesn't flow through forests or deserts.
the ridge and valley region