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Oxfordshire |
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Oxfordshire![]() The village of Islip, on Otmoor in Oxfordshire, England. Villages that become important are often those that have a good location for trade. The most accessible sites offer the best opportunities for trade. Islip is close to a number of other villages and hamlets. It provides services for these, such as a local school, church, and railway station, and it is well situated to draw on the skills of people from neighbouring settlements. ![]() A weathered gravestone at Cassington, Oxfordshire, England. Gravestones are excellent laboratories for geographers. The date on the grave gives us a good idea how long the rock has been exposed to the forces of nature. The gravestone has been subjected to biological weathering (the growth of lichens, ivy and other plants). In the UK, west-facing stones are usually more weathered than east-facing stones, because winds from the west are warmer and moister, whereas east winds are typically colder and drier. Rock type is also important: igneous and metamorphic rocks, such as granite and marble, weather more slowly than sedimentary rocks, such as limestone. ![]() Baled hay in a field in Oxfordshire, England. Farming removes many nutrients from ecosystems. In a natural ecosystem nutrients are recycled during leaf-fall. In farming systems, however, nutrients are removed during harvest. Some are consumed directly by people, whereas others – such as the hay here – are consumed by animals, which are then in turn consumed by people. The more intensive the farming system, the more nutrients are taken from the land. ![]() Wytham Woods, near Oxford, England. Bluebells can be seen on the floor of this deciduous woodland. Deciduous trees lose their leaves in autumn, and in the spring this allows high levels of light to reach the flowers on the ground. As the leaves mature, there is less sunlight, and the bluebells die back. ![]() Wytham Woods, near Oxford, England. In early spring the forest floor was covered in bluebells, but as new leaves grow and cast more shade, less sunlight reaches the flowers, and they die back. Deciduous woodlands thus have pronounced seasonal differences in flower and vegetation growth, to make use of the available light. County of south central England. Area2,610 sq km/1,007 sq miTowns and citiesOxford (administrative headquarters), Abingdon, Banbury, Goring, Henley-on-Thames, Wallingford, Witney, Woodstock, Wantage, Chipping Norton, ThamePhysicalRiver Thames and tributaries (the Cherwell, Evenlode, Ock, Thame, and Windrush);Cotswold Hills (in the north) and Chiltern Hills (in the southeast) FeaturesVale of the White Horse (with a chalk hill figure 114 m/374 ft, below the hill camp known as Uffington Castle); Oxford University; Blenheim Palace (a World Heritage site), Woodstock, started in 1705 by Vanbrugh with help from Nicholas Hawksmoor, completed in 1722, with landscaped grounds by Capability Brown; early 14th-century Broughton Castle; Rousham Park (1635), remodelled by William Kent (1738–40), with landscaped garden; Ditchley Park, designed by James Gibbs in 1720; Europe's major fusion project JET (Joint European Torus) at the UK Atomic Energy Authority's fusion laboratories at Culham; Henley RegattaAgriculturecereals, sheep, dairy farmingIndustriesagricultural implements; aluminium; bricks; cars (Cowley); cement; high-technology industries; medical electronic equipment; paper; publishing; nuclear research (Harwell); biotechnologyPopulation(2001) 605,500Famous peopleWinston Churchill (politician), William Davenant (poet), Stephen Hawking (physicist), Flora Thompson (author)
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