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British geography

Posted: Sun Jan 18, 2009 2:57 pm
by Peter Mabey
The "US States" topic prompts me to celebrate my 100th posting by asking a similar question about Britain - the eastern one is easy, but for the others it'll be necessary to find answers for (a) England (b) Great Britain (c) the United Kingdom (d) the British Isles.
Pedants may start hares running in all directions by considering whether embassies (and consulates?) are considered to be legally British territory. :geek:

Re: British geography

Posted: Sun Jan 18, 2009 4:40 pm
by Howard Somerset
If we're thinking of counties, then for England I would say that the south, west and north are easier than the east.

Are you wanting answers here in this thread, or by pm?

Extending the question to Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland separately would be interesting too.

Re: British geography

Posted: Sun Jan 18, 2009 5:01 pm
by Ben Wilson
Eastern one is easy, but only if you know it [/tarannt]. (It's Lowestoft in Suffolk ;))

Re: British geography

Posted: Mon Jan 19, 2009 10:35 am
by Neil Zussman
I believe the most Southernly point is the Lizard, and the Western point is Land's End- therefore both in Cornwall.
I think the North question has been a question on Millionnaire, but I can't remember the answer.

Re: British geography

Posted: Mon Jan 19, 2009 12:01 pm
by Peter Mabey
Howard Somerset wrote:Are you wanting answers here in this thread, or by pm?

Extending the question to Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland separately would be interesting too.
Answers here, please, as I'm not sure of best answers beyond England.
Agree other separate countries would be interesting.

Re: British geography

Posted: Mon Jan 19, 2009 4:42 pm
by Howard Somerset
ok. I've resisted the temptation to look at any map since seeing this tread for the first time.

some are guesses, and some I'm pretty confident about

England - north Northumberland, east Suffolk, south and west Cornwall
Great Britain - north Shetland, east Suffolk, south Cornwall, west Inverness (I'm hoping that includes the western isles)
UK - as GB, except west Fermanagh
British Isles - as UK, except west is a county of whose name I have no idea situated somewhere around Cork

Scotland - north and west as for GB, east Berwickshire, south Dumfriesshire
Wales - guessing on all four here and I might be mixing old and new county boundaries, north Gwynnedd, east Flint, south Glamorgan, west Cardigan
Northern Ireland - not even going to attempt this one

Re: British geography

Posted: Mon Jan 19, 2009 9:53 pm
by Jeff Clayton
The easternmost point of the UK mainland is actually Lowestoft Ness. The northernmost tip is Dunnett Head, several miles west of John O'Groats and up a bit more.


Jeff

Re: British geography

Posted: Mon Jan 19, 2009 9:58 pm
by Howard Somerset
I'd thought we were going for counties, rather like the US one was for states. But if it's actual locations, and we're confining it to the GB mainland, then southern extremity is Lizard Point, and western is Ardnamurchan Point (west of Fort William)

Re: British geography

Posted: Mon Jan 19, 2009 11:04 pm
by Gary Male
Good Evening Rockall! Unless that doesn't count (which it shouldn't)

Re: British geography

Posted: Tue Jan 20, 2009 11:49 pm
by Ian Volante
British Isles (if you include the Channel Islands), then in the north it's Yell I think in Shetland, west is either Rockall (dubious) or somewhere in Kerry (I'm told it's not Valentia, but it's out that way), south I'm not actually sure now I think about it, Jersey is it? East is of course Lowestoft.

For the UK, the west changes to (forgetting Rockall) St.Kilda most probably.