Geolocate

Botany Bay topographic map

Click on the map to display elevation.

About this map

Name: Botany Bay topographic map, elevation, terrain.

Location: Botany Bay, Greater London, England, EN2 8AL, United Kingdom (51.65658 -0.14590 51.69658 -0.10590)

Average elevation: 70 m

Minimum elevation: 34 m

Maximum elevation: 118 m

Other topographic maps

Click on a map to view its topography, its elevation and its terrain.

Greater London

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 66 m

Bristol

United Kingdom > England > City of Bristol

Average elevation: 55 m

Sheffield

United Kingdom > England

Sheffield nestles on the eastern foothills of the Pennines and is sculpted by a dramatic hill-and-valley system formed where five rivers — the Don, Sheaf, Rivelin, Loxley and Porter — converge, producing steep-sided valleys and gritstone ridgelines with much of the urban area built directly onto hillsides…

Average elevation: 168 m

Leeds

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 96 m

Brighton

United Kingdom > England > Brighton and Hove

Average elevation: 64 m

Kent

United Kingdom > England

Kent was also the location of the largest number of art schools in the country during the nineteenth century, estimated by the art historian David Haste, to approach two hundred. This is believed to be the result of Kent being a front line county during the Napoleonic Wars. At this time, before the invention…

Average elevation: 37 m

Cumbria

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 186 m

Birmingham

United Kingdom > England

Birmingham is a snowy city relative to other large UK conurbations, due to its inland location and comparatively high elevation. Between 1961 and 1990 Birmingham Airport averaged 13.0 days of snow lying annually, compared to 5.33 at London Heathrow. Snow showers often pass through the city via the Cheshire gap…

Average elevation: 138 m

Hampshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 73 m

Thames Valley

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 110 m

South East England

United Kingdom > England

Near Weybridge are the UK headquarters of Sony with SSP Group (situated in Byfleet) and Procter & Gamble (next door to each other on The Heights Business Park near the former Brooklands racing circuit) with Kia Motors UK and Petroleum Geo-Services UK, and Gallaher Group (cigarettes) is to the north, next to…

Average elevation: 69 m

Norwich

United Kingdom > England > Norfolk

Average elevation: 28 m

Hexham

United Kingdom > England > Northumberland

Average elevation: 122 m

Devon

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 94 m

Isle of Wight

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 17 m

Greater Manchester

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 141 m

Southampton

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 22 m

East of England

United Kingdom > England

The East of England region has the lowest elevation range in the UK. Twenty percent of the region is below mean sea level, most of this in North Cambridgeshire, Norfolk and on the Essex Coast. Most of the remaining area is of low elevation, with extensive glacial deposits. The Fens, a large area of reclaimed…

Average elevation: 39 m

Shropshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 166 m

West Yorkshire

United Kingdom > England

Wakefield's Parish Church was raised to cathedral status in 1888 and after the elevation of Wakefield to diocese, Wakefield Council immediately sought city status and this was granted in July 1888. However the industrial revolution, which changed West and South Yorkshire significantly, led to the growth of…

Average elevation: 172 m

Bath

United Kingdom > England > Bath and North East Somerset

Bath is in the Avon Valley and is surrounded by limestone hills as it is near the southern edge of the Cotswolds, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, and the limestone Mendip Hills rise around 7 miles (11 km) south of the city. The hills that surround and make up the city have a maximum altitude…

Average elevation: 100 m

Kingston upon Hull

United Kingdom > England

Kingston upon Hull is on the northern bank of the Humber Estuary. The city centre is west of the River Hull and close to the Humber. The city is built upon alluvial and glacial deposits which overlie chalk rocks but the underlying chalk has no influence on the topography. The land within the city is generally…

Average elevation: 3 m

Lake District National Park

United Kingdom > England

The Lake District is a roughly circular upland massif, deeply dissected by a broadly radial pattern of major valleys which are largely the result of repeated glaciations over the last 2 million years. The apparent radial pattern is not from a central dome, but from an axial watershed extending from St Bees…

Average elevation: 206 m

Northamptonshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 97 m

Norfolk

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 23 m

Oxford

United Kingdom > England > Oxfordshire

Average elevation: 81 m

North East England

United Kingdom > England

North East England has a Marine west coast climate (generally found along the west coast of middle latitude continents) with narrower temperature ranges than the south of England and sufficient precipitation in all months. Summers and winters are mild rather than extremely hot or cold, due to the strong…

Average elevation: 165 m

Wiltshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 115 m

Somerset

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 87 m

Bolton

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 151 m

Manchester

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 66 m

Winchester

United Kingdom > England > Hampshire

Average elevation: 73 m

Maldon

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 27 m

Coventry

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 99 m

Nottingham

United Kingdom > England > Nottinghamshire

Average elevation: 56 m

Sussex

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 39 m

Greater London

United Kingdom > England

London's topography is characterized by a gently rolling terrain shaped by the River Thames and its tributaries. The city lies within the London Basin, a natural depression bordered by higher grounds such as the North Downs to the south and the Chiltern Hills to the northwest. The Thames flows west to east,…

Average elevation: 66 m

Surrey

United Kingdom > England > Surrey

The highest elevation in Surrey is Leith Hill near Dorking. It is 295 m (968 ft) above sea level and is the second highest point in southeastern England after Walbury Hill in West Berkshire which is 297 m (974 ft).

Average elevation: 69 m

Preston

United Kingdom > England > Lancashire

Average elevation: 58 m

East Anglia

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 29 m

Cumbria

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 186 m

Chippenham

United Kingdom > England > Wiltshire

Average elevation: 63 m

Yorkshire

United Kingdom > England

In Yorkshire there is a very close relationship between the major topographical areas and the geological period in which they were formed. The Pennine chain of hills in the west is of Carboniferous origin. The central vale is Permo-Triassic. The North York Moors in the north-east of the county are Jurassic in…

Average elevation: 130 m

Ely

United Kingdom > England > Cambridgeshire

Ely is built on a 23-square-mile (60 km2) Kimmeridge Clay island which, at 85 feet (26 m), is the highest land in the Fens. It was due to this topography that Ely was not waterlogged like the surrounding Fenland, and was an island separated from the mainland. Major rivers including the Witham, Welland, Nene…

Average elevation: 4 m

Bridport

United Kingdom > England > Dorset

Bridport is in the county of Dorset in South West England. Measured directly, it is about 14 miles (23 km) west of the county town Dorchester, 15.5 miles (25 km) SSW of Yeovil in Somerset, 33 miles (53 km) east of Exeter in Devon and 1.5 miles (2.4 km) inland from the English Channel at West Bay. The town…

Average elevation: 39 m

Borough of Runnymede

United Kingdom > England > Surrey

Average elevation: 34 m

Keyworth

United Kingdom > England > Nottinghamshire > Rushcliffe

Average elevation: 68 m

Suffolk

United Kingdom > England

The west of the county lies on more resistant Cretaceous chalk. This chalk is responsible for a sweeping tract of largely downland landscapes that stretches from Dorset in the south west to Dover in the south east and north through East Anglia to the Yorkshire Wolds. The chalk is less easily eroded so forms…

Average elevation: 35 m

Essex

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 44 m

Worthing

United Kingdom > England > West Sussex

Average elevation: 35 m

Cambridge

United Kingdom > England > Cambridge

The city, like most of the UK, has a maritime climate highly influenced by the Gulf Stream. Located in the driest region of Britain, Cambridge's rainfall averages around 570 mm (22.44 in) per year, around half the national average, with some years occasionally falling into the semi-arid (under 500 mm (19.69…

Average elevation: 18 m

Liverpool

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 26 m

Lake District National Park

United Kingdom > England

The Lake District is a roughly circular upland massif, deeply dissected by a broadly radial pattern of major valleys which are largely the result of repeated glaciations over the last 2 million years. The apparent radial pattern is not from a central dome, but from an axial watershed extending from St Bees…

Average elevation: 206 m

St. Agnes

United Kingdom > England > Cornwall > Mount Hawke

Average elevation: 78 m

Allerton Bywater

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 20 m

Wadhurst

United Kingdom > England > East Sussex > Wealden

Average elevation: 109 m

North West England

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 118 m

Cheshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 103 m

Oxfordshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 113 m

City of Bristol

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 80 m

Warwickshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 111 m

Rochdale

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 223 m

Dover

United Kingdom > England > Kent

Average elevation: 39 m

Lincoln

United Kingdom > England > Lincolnshire

Lincoln lies 157 mi (253 km) north of London, at an altitude of 67 ft (20.4 m) by the River Witham up to 246 ft (75.0 m) on Castle Hill. It fills a gap in the Lincoln Cliff escarpment, which runs north and south through central Lincolnshire, with altitudes up to 200 feet (61 metres). The city lies on the River…

Average elevation: 29 m

Sunderland

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 46 m

St Helens

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 49 m

East Anglia

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 29 m

Devizes

United Kingdom > England > Wiltshire

Average elevation: 118 m

Bury

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 150 m

Reading

United Kingdom > England

Jane Austen attended Reading Ladies Boarding School, based in the Abbey Gateway, in 1784–1786. Mary Russell Mitford lived in Reading for a number of years and then spent the rest of her life just outside the town at Three Mile Cross and Swallowfield. The fictional Belford Regis of her eponymous novel, first…

Average elevation: 54 m

River Tees

United Kingdom > England

The source of the river at Teeshead just below Cross Fell is at an elevation of about 2,401 feet (732 m). It flows east-north-east through an area of shake holes through Carboniferous Limestone. Below Viewing Hill, it turns south to the Cow Green Reservoir constructed to store water to be released in dry…

Average elevation: 218 m

Hertfordshire

United Kingdom > England

Elevations are higher in the north and west, reaching more than 800 feet (240 m) in the Chilterns near Tring. The county centres on the headwaters and upper valleys of the rivers Lea and the Colne; both flow south, and each is accompanied by a canal. Hertfordshire's undeveloped land is mainly agricultural,…

Average elevation: 82 m

North Yorkshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 153 m

Northumberland

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 141 m

Derby

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 70 m

Exeter

United Kingdom > England > Devon

The city of Exeter was established on the eastern bank of the River Exe on a ridge of land backed by a steep hill. It is at this point that the Exe, having just been joined by the River Creedy, opens onto a wide flood plain and estuary which results in quite common flooding. Historically this was the lowest…

Average elevation: 56 m

Lancaster

United Kingdom > England > Lancashire

Average elevation: 84 m

Brentwood

United Kingdom > England > Essex

Average elevation: 64 m

Wakefield

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 88 m

Fareham

United Kingdom > England > Hampshire

Average elevation: 21 m

Westfield

United Kingdom > England > East Sussex > Rother > Westfield

Average elevation: 48 m

Dunsfold

United Kingdom > England > Surrey > Waverley

St Mary & All Saints' Church is a Norman building, containing the oldest pews in England. The nearby Holy Well was a site of pilgrimage – its waters were thought to cure diseases of the eye. It would be consistent with the topography of the site that the well be a pre-Christian site and the church itself be…

Average elevation: 52 m

Newbiggin

United Kingdom > England > County Durham

Average elevation: 451 m

Great Tey

United Kingdom > England > Essex > Colchester > Great Tey

Average elevation: 51 m

Norton sub Hamdon

United Kingdom > England > Somerset

Average elevation: 56 m

Welsh Newton

United Kingdom > England > Herefordshire

Average elevation: 157 m