lunes, 11 de abril de 2016

Lake District

READING TO FISRT GRADE

FOURTH MOMENT 2016


Lake District


The Lake District National Park is one of fourteen National parks in the United Kingdom. It lies entirely within Cumbria, and is one of England's few mountainous regions. All the land in England higher than three thousand feet above sea level lies within the Park. The Lakes, as the region is also called, were made famous during the early 19th century by the poetry and writings of William Wordsworth and the Lake Poets.

The Lake District is about 34 miles (55 km) across (north-to-south or west-to-east). Its features are a result of periods of glaciation, the most recent of which ended some 15000 years ago. The ice carved wide U-shaped valleys, many of which are now filled with the lakes that give the park its name. The upper regions contain a number of glacial cirques, which are typically filled with tarns. The higher fells are rocky, with lower fells being open moorland, notable for its wide bracken and heather coverage. Below the tree line native oak woodlands sit alongside nineteenth century pine plantations. Much of the land is often boggy, due to the high rainfall
.

  
Questions about the text

1. There are 14 national parks in the UK.
True.
False.
We don't know.
2. The Lake District is about...
34 km across.
55 km across.
55 miles across.
3. The latest glaciation period was 15000 years ago.
True.
False.
We don't know.
4. The ice formed the valleys, which then became lakes.
True.
False.
We don't know.
5. It doesn't rain too much in the area.
True.
False.
We don't know.


No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario

Nota: solo los miembros de este blog pueden publicar comentarios.