Image:Black Hill (Peak District).jpg

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Description

The Pennine Way on the summit of Black Hill (Peak District). The triangulation column and highest point on Black Hill is on a small elevated mound, called Soldiers' Lump. According to Alfred Wainwright's Pennine Way Companion the support timbers for the Ramsden theodolite, used by the Royal Engineers in the original Ordnance Survey, were still to be found here many years later.
Photograph by Stephen Dawson 7 August en:2004.

Source

Originally from en.wikipedia; description page is/was here.

Date

2005-02-06 (original upload date)

Author

Original uploader was StephenDawson at en.wikipedia

Permission
(Reusing this image)
Creative Commons License
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This file is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 2.0 License (cc-by-sa-2.0). In short: you are free to share and make derivative works of the file under the conditions that you appropriately attribute it, and that you distribute it under this or a similar cc-by-sa license.


[edit] Original upload log

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  • 2005-02-06 21:06 StephenDawson 2048×1536×8 (1218950 bytes) Pennine Way on the summit of Black Hill (Peak District)

File history

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Date/TimeDimensionsUserComment
current23:31, 1 September 20072,048×1,536 (1.16 MB)Responsible? ({{Information |Description=The Pennine Way on the summit of Black Hill (Peak District). The triangulation column and highest point on Black Hill is on a small elevated mound, called Soldiers' Lump. According to Alfred Wainwright's ''Pennine Way Companion')
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