| Thomas Wedge, Board of Agriculture (Great Britain) - 1794 - 476 pages
...the climate extremely cold and bleak, which will always be a bar to their improvement. The surface of some of the higher hills is entirely covered with large free-stones; on others large beds of peat, (which in many places are very deep, frequently not to be passed, and never without... | |
| John Tuke - 1794 - 130 pages
...the climate extremely cold and bleak, which will always be a bar to their improvement. The surface of some of the higher hills is entirely covered with large free-stones ; on others large beds of peat, (which in many places are very deep, frequently not to be passed, and never without... | |
| John Britton, John Hodgson - 1812 - 1036 pages
...dales. " The surface of some of the lu'gher hills is entirely covered with large free-stones : o« others, beds of peat, which, in many places, are very...distance, the produce of which is always ling (erica, tetrselix vulgaris and cinerea) but in some placet mixed with bent (juncus bulbosus) and rushes (juncus... | |
| John Bigland - 1815 - 1038 pages
...from north to south, and are penetrated by a number of beautiful and fertile dales. " The surface of some of the higher hills is entirely covered with...distance, the produce of which is always ling (erica, tetraelix vulgaris and cinerea) but in some places mixed with bent (juncusbulbosus) and rushes (juncus... | |
| Thomas Allen - 1889 - 384 pages
...from north to south, and are penetrated by a number of beautiful and fertile dales. "The surface of some of the higher hills is entirely covered with...great distance, the produce of which is always ling, but in some places mixed with bent and rushes. Near to the old enclosures some considerable tracts... | |
| Thomas Allen - 1828 - 384 pages
...from north to south, and are penetrated by a number of beautiful and fertile dales. "The surface of some of the higher hills is entirely covered with...peat, which in many places are very deep (frequently iiot to be passed, and never without danger), extend themselves to a great distance, the produce of... | |
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