The English Lake District is in Cumbria, the northwesternmost county of England, a little south of the border with Scotland. Keswick, Kendall, and Windermere are among the larger towns, and Windermere, Coniston Water, Ullswater, Derwent Water, Grasmere, and Bassenthwaite Lake the larger lakes, with Windermere being the largest.
Lake Windermere, in the Lake District.
lake district
Val Corbett has written: 'Beautiful Lake District (Heritage Landscapes)' 'Giant Landscapes Beautiful Lake District (Giant Landscapes)' 'Lake District Villages (Village Britain)'
William Wordsworth lived in Grasmere, which is in the Lake District of Britain
many people think lakes+water=lots of rain. this is not true. the lake district is the most hottest part of great britain. Amy sofowora (a famous scientist) said that it only rains 3mm of rain in a year at the lake district!!
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.
The answer is, yes, there was. About 40 supervolcanoes are dotted across the globe. There are two in Britain - one in Glencoe, Scotland, the other in Scafell in the Lake District. However, most supervolcanoes, including those in Britain, burned out long ago.http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/programmes/supervolcano/article.shtml
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.
Lake District Hospital was created in 1971.