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GCSE/Geography/Edexcel

T4.1UK physical landscapes overview: upland and lowland regions, geological structure (igneous, sedimentary, metamorphic), past and present-day processes

Notes

UK Physical Landscapes

A landscape of contrasts

The UK packs huge physical variety into a small area. A simplified divide runs from the Tees–Exe line (north-east to south-west) — separating the uplands of Scotland, North England, Wales and Northern Ireland (older, harder rock, higher relief) from the lowlands of southern and eastern England (younger, softer rock, gentler relief).

Upland regions

  • Scottish Highlands — ancient metamorphic rock (gneiss, schist), heavily glaciated; Britain's highest peak Ben Nevis (1,345 m).
  • Lake District — volcanic and slate geology, U-shaped valleys, ribbon lakes (Wastwater, Windermere) — classic glacial landscape.
  • Pennines — "the backbone of England", carboniferous limestone and millstone grit, gently undulating moorland.
  • Snowdonia (Wales) — volcanic rock, dramatic glaciated peaks (Yr Wyddfa 1,085 m), corries and arêtes.
  • Mourne Mountains (NI) — granite intrusions.

Lowland regions

  • The South-East — soft chalk (North/South Downs, Salisbury Plain), clay vales, sandstone ridges. Low relief, productive farmland.
  • East Anglia — flat, low-lying, often below sea level (Fens drained from 17th century), young alluvial deposits.
  • The Midlands — mixed sedimentary rocks; Triassic mudstones underlie the Trent valley.

Geological foundations

The UK shows three rock types:

  • Igneous: formed from cooled magma — granite (Dartmoor, Lake District), basalt (Giant's Causeway). Hard, resistant → uplands.
  • Sedimentary: formed from compressed sediments — chalk, limestone, sandstone (most of southern England). Often softer; chalk produces escarpments.
  • Metamorphic: changed by heat/pressure — slate (Snowdonia), schist (Scottish Highlands). Hard, resistant.

Past and present-day processes

  • Past glacial action (Ice Age, ended ~10,000 BP): ice sheets covered the UK as far south as the Thames. Carved corries, U-shaped valleys, ribbon lakes; deposited drumlins, eskers; left the Holderness coast vulnerable to erosion (boulder clay).
  • Present-day processes: weathering (freeze-thaw on Pennines), mass movement (rotational slumping at Holderness), fluvial action (River Tees), coastal processes (Dorset's Jurassic Coast).
  • Human modification: deforestation, drainage of the Fens, dam-building, urbanisation.

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Practice questions

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  1. Question 14 marks

    Distribution of UK rock types (4 marks)

    Explain why upland areas of the UK are mainly found in the north and west. [4 marks]

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  2. Question 28 marks

    Examine glaciation and UK landscapes (8 marks)

    Examine how past glaciation has shaped the upland landscapes of the UK. [8 marks]

    Level mark scheme:

    LevelMarksDescriptor
    L11–3Simple statements about ice age; little detail; no named features/places.
    L24–6Some explanation of glacial processes and landforms; named UK examples; partial coverage.
    L37–8Detailed examination of erosional AND depositional features; multiple named landforms in named upland regions; clear linkage between process and outcome; evaluative conclusion.

    Indicative content:

    • Erosional features: corries (Helvellyn, Lake District); arêtes (Striding Edge); pyramidal peaks (Snowdon); U-shaped valleys (Great Langdale); ribbon lakes (Windermere, Wastwater); roches moutonnées.
    • Depositional features: drumlins (Eden Valley, Cumbria); moraines (terminal moraines blocking valleys to form ribbon lakes); erratics (Norber boulders, Yorkshire Dales).
    • Processes: abrasion, plucking, frost shattering above the ice, freeze-thaw weathering still active today on Pennines and Lakes.
    • Wider impact: glacial deposits (boulder clay) also affect coastal erosion (Holderness) and lowlands (East Anglia).
    • Conclusion: ice was the dominant landscape architect of upland Britain — its U-shaped valleys, glacial troughs and corries define the visual character of the Lakes, Snowdonia and the Highlands today.
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  3. Question 312 marks

    Evaluate physical and human influences on UK landscape (12 marks)

    Evaluate the relative influence of physical and human processes on the UK's landscape today. [12 marks]

    Level mark scheme:

    LevelMarksDescriptor
    L11–4Description only; no balance physical vs human; no examples.
    L25–8Discussion of both physical and human processes; named examples; partial evaluation.
    L39–12Detailed evaluation; multiple physical AND human processes contrasted with named examples; weighted judgement; justified conclusion.

    Indicative content (physical):

    • Geology controls upland/lowland distribution (Tees–Exe line).
    • Past glaciation carved upland landscapes (Lake District, Snowdonia).
    • Ongoing fluvial, coastal and weathering processes shaping landforms (Holderness retreating ~2 m/year, freeze-thaw on Pennines).

    Indicative content (human):

    • Deforestation since Neolithic — UK only ~13% forested today (vs ~75% naturally).
    • Fens drained from 17th c. — ~3,800 km² of low-lying farmland created.
    • Dam construction — Kielder, Ladybower — flooded valleys.
    • Urban sprawl — over 8% UK is now built up.
    • Coastal management — sea walls, groynes (Mappleton vs Hornsea) actively reshape coast.

    Conclusion: physical processes set the long-term canvas (geology, ice age, ongoing erosion) but humans have decisively transformed the lowlands and increasingly modify upland ecosystems (peatland restoration, rewilding). Strongest answers note that the two interact — climate change accelerates physical processes (sea level rise + Holderness erosion) and triggers human responses.

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Flashcards

T4.1 — UK physical landscapes: upland, lowland, geology and processes

7-card SR deck for Edexcel Geography (leaves batch 1) topic T4.1

7 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)