Cheriton Hill
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Cheriton Hill | |
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The English Channel from the covered reservoir on Cheriton Hill |
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Elevation | 188 m (617 ft) |
Location | North Downs, England |
Prominence | 150 m |
Topo map | OS Landrangers 179, 189 |
OS grid reference | TR197396 |
Listing | Marilyn |
Cheriton Hill is a hill near Folkestone in the south-east corner of the English county of Kent, overlooking the English Channel. The relatively low-lying hill (reaching only 188 metres above sea level) is covered with farmland, villages, narrow lanes, and footpaths. The highest point is on a covered reservoir next to the trig point; the highest natural point is nearby, probably close to the road to the village of Paddlesworth, near a transmitter mast, but the relatively flat summit gives no real impression of being on top of a hill.
By contrast, the southern edge of the hill is a steep escarpment which carries the ancient track named Pilgrims' Way, which is believed to date from 500–450 BC, and which runs from Folkestone along the North Downs hills. At this point the escarpment overlooks the huge Cheriton Channel Tunnel terminal, with views to France across the roofs of Folkestone. The slope of this escarpment is the location of the Folkestone White Horse, completed in 2003.
Cheriton Hill was the location of the discovery of the Late Spider orchid in the 1800s. At one point the number of known plants declined to just six, but with improved management of the chalk grassland, the population is now much healthier, estimated in 2004 to be 137 plants, some 30% of the UK population.
Cheriton Hill is one of the Marilyns identified since the publication of The Relative Hills of Britain in 1992, and is the most easterly Marilyn.