Do You Know the Geographic Features of the UK?

By: Zoe Samuel
Estimated Completion Time
4 min
Do You Know the Geographic Features of the UK?
Image: Wikicommons by Sumit Surai

About This Quiz

The geography of the UK defined much of its history, determining economic hubs, the locations of ports, where manufacturing took place, ancient borders and even when invaders were or were not successful. Its natural beauty extends from the warmer south to the stark beauty of its northernmost islands. The UK contains natural resources from mineral deposits to hydropower to oil fields. Its geography is the reason it was so simple for early paleontologists to find dinosaur fossils. It is how ancient burials were preserved. Britain's geography is the reason its ancient people were able to mine, shape and transport the huge stone slabs that are Stonehenge.

The UK's stately homes are well known, but the natural beauty of the land is often overlooked in favor of the achievements of Britons in shaping the landscape with roads, rails and tunnels. Even ancient people made their marks on the look of the countryside, carving The White Horse of Uffington into the very earth. and the unforgettable if rather rude image of the Cerne Abbas Giant, similarly tattooed into the countryside.

Do you take the land around you for granted or are you as fascinated with its natural wonders as we are? It's time to test your knowledge of British geography!

Question 010 - The White Cliffs of Dover
Wikicommons by Immanuel Giel
Stark beauty, defined. What name would you give this?
Stump Cross Caverns
The Severn Bore
Salisbury Plain
The White Cliffs of Dover
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Situated near Dover Castle, The White Cliffs of Dover are one of the most iconic images of Britain, appearing in paintings, photographs and films. They performed an important role in WW2, being topped with radar banks keeping a lookout for German aircraft.

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Question 01 - The Thames
Wikicommons by Diliff
Can you name this river, which has been an important trade artery since time immemorial?
Wookey Hole
Beachy Head
The Wash
The Thames
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

With 45 navigational locks, the Thames remains important to maritime transport. Guarded by the Thames Barrier, a huge, mechanical wall, the Thames is protected from the storm surge of any potential storm in the North Sea that would otherwise flood London.

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Question 018 - Staffa Fingal's Cave
Wikicommons by Hartmut Josi Bennöhr (User:Josi~commonswiki / de:User:Josi-sh)
What a remarkable formation! Do you know what this place is called?
Fingal's Cave
Glyder Fawr
Pen y Fan
The New Forest
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Looking like something out of a David Lynch film, Fingal's Cave sits on an uninhabited island in Scotland. Noted for its acoustics, it owes its unique appearance and shape to its composition: basalt rock.

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Question 017 - Stump Cross Caverns
Wikicommons by Simon Frost
This looks like a good place to hide something. What do you see?
Glyder Fawr
Pen y Fan
The Weald
Stump Cross Caverns
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Discovered by lead miners two hundred years ago, Stump Cross Caverns are a natural cave system, not a mine. Over the years, cave explorers have found the remains of ancient animals, and even reindeer! Located in Yorkshire, it's not even very far away.

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Question 011 - The Lake District
Wikicommons by User:Diliff
This place is just magical. What is its name?
The Lake District
South Downs
High Cliff
Stump Cross Caverns
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Located in northwest England, The Lake District is a picturesque region of small mountains, deep lakes and spectacular views. Geologically similar to Scotland but populated with different flora, this area is a popular place for holidays for good reason.

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Question 028 - Three Peaks
Wikicommons by Bob Embleton / Three Peaks
What do you think the name of this is?
The Three Peaks
Bodmin Moor
The Blackwater
Grisedale Tarn
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The Three Peaks are three mountains that form the basis of The Three Peaks Challenge. These mountains are Scafell Pike, Ben Nevis and Snowdon, the tallest mountains in England, Scotland and Wales, respectively.

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Question 013 - Loch Ness
Wikicommons by © Guillaume Piolle
What's the name of this body of water, known for a mythical and magical being?
High Cliff
Fingal's Cave
Loch Ness
Stump Cross Caverns
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Loch Ness is one of many gorgeous lochs in Scotland, but it is one of the best known lakes in the world because of its most famous resident, the Loch Ness Monster, affectionately known as Nessie. Have you spotted her?

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Question 04 - Pennine Way
Wikicommons by Fir0002 at English Wikipedia
This vista is truly awe-inspiring. At what are we looking?
The White Cliffs of Dover
Loch Ness
The Lake District
The Pennine Way
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

One of the two longest trails in the UK, the creation of The Pennine Way was inspired by the Appalachian Trail in America. The Pennine Way is a difficult trail, but it both passes through some beautiful countryside and is full of friendly ramblers.

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Question 015 - Salisbury Plain
Wikicommons by Brian Robert Marshall / Water Dean Bottom, Salisbury Plain
Beautiful! This place conceals ancient secrets. What is its name?
South Downs
Pen y Fan
The Weald
Salisbury Plain
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Salisbury Plain is anything but plain. It is bisected by a road that partially runs below the surface of the plain in order to keep the views pristine. The reason for this need is Salisbury Plain contains Stonehenge, the iconic Stone Age site.

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Question 038 - Land's End
Wikicommons by Dietmar Rabich / Wikimedia Commons / “Land's End (Cornwall, UK), Coast Path -- 2013 -- 1061”
This watery place is so picturesque. What is its name?
John o' Groats
The Thames Estuary
Sheltand
Land's End
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Land's End is the bleak, granite coastal fringe of Cornwall, before reaching into the Atlantic Ocean. It is the most westerly point in England.

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Question 05 - Cheddar Gorge
Wikicommons by Prosthetic Head
This formation has something to show. What is its name?
Cheddar Gorge
Malham Cove
The Wash
Ben Nevis
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Cheddar Gorge, so named because it is near the town of Cheddar, is the home of the original cheddar cheese. At the bottom of the deepest parts of the gorge is a small cave system, in which cheddar cheese is aged, and visitors can be given guided tours.

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Question 029 - Bodmin Moor
Wikicommons by MartinCornwallUK
Dark and forbidding, this place has a great name. What is it?
The Fens
The Devil's Appendix
The Firth of Forth
Bodmin Moor
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Bodmin Moor is a vast expanse in Cornwall, noted for its granite underpinnings and the highest point in Cornwall, the oddly named Brown Willie. Home to many old legends, the one concerning the Beast of Bodmin has, oddly, only been around since the 1970s.

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Question 014 - Old Man Of Storr
Wikicommons by Clem_nat
What natural curiosity is this?
The Old Man of Storr
South Downs
Fingal's Cave
High Cliff
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The Old Man of Storr is a rock formation on The Isle of Skye, in the furthest reaches of Scotland. Part of a much larger area of great natural beauty called The Sanctuary, it abuts The Storr, a mountain with a side of rock exposed due to landslip. The Old Man, however, stands alone.

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Question 09 - The Wash
Wikicommons by Roger Gittins / The Wash
A priceless view. Do you know what it is?
The Wash
Fingal's Cave
The Old Man of Storr
The Severn Bore
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

When Lincolnshire and Norfolk meet and four rivers collide, it all comes out in The Wash. A huge estuary, The Wash spills into the North Sea.

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Question 06 - The Jurassic Coast
Wikicommons by Saffron Blaze
What is the peculiar name of this place?
Loch Ness
The White Cliffs of Dover
The Lake District
The Jurassic Coast
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Were it not for Mary Anning and The Jurassic Coast, paleontology would not be what it is today. So called because of the tremendous exposed rock and fossils, The Jurassic Coast frequently gives up its secrets as it erodes, exposing the bones of prehistoric creatures, and giving up the secrets of how the land used to be.

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Question 021 - Pen y Fan
Wikicommons by Dave.Dunford
Doesn't this look like an oil painting? What name would you give it?
Arthur's Seat
The New Forest
The Forest of Dennis
Pen y Fan
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Pen y Fan is the highest peak in South Wales, standing a full 2,907 feet at its highest elevation. Used for military training by the government, soldiers have died while attempting its conquest in their survival and navigation exercises.

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Question 08 - Ben Nevis
Wikicommons by Aeleftherios at French Wikipedia
Magnificent! Which of these is the name of this place?
The Lake District
Loch Ness
The Old Man of Storr
Ben Nevis
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The highest mountain in all of the British Isles, Ben Nevis was once a towering volcano, though those days are long in the past. The name is derived from the Gaelic for mountain, and a word of which no one can remember the meaning.

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Question 033 - The Firth of Forth
Wikicommons by tormentor4555
Look at the power of this! What is it called?
Cautley Spout
Land's End
Pass of Killiecrankie
The Firth of Forth
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The Firth of Forth is the fjord into which the Forth River empties. This is the body famously crossed by The Forth Bridge, a structure so huge that the time it takes a crew to paint it is equal to the time it takes for the oldest parts of the paint to need repainting.

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Question 019 - High Cliff
Wikicommons by Nilfanion
The sheer size of this boggles the mind! Where are we?
The Weald
The Forest of Dennis
Glyder Fawr
High Cliff
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Cornwall's High Cliff is one of the best-named places in the whole world! Rather than attempting poetry, whoever named it was quite literal: The cliff is the highest drop in Cornwall with a height of 732 feet!

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Question 027 - The River Usk
Wikicommons by Rosser1954
Some geography is intertwined with history. What is the name of this historical feature?
The River Usk
The Blackwater
The Fens
Grisedale Tarn
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The River Usk flows from the Black Mountain in Wales, east, and then south to the sea. As it goes, it passes the town of Caerleon, the site of a Roman ruin which seems to have inspired many of the details of the myths in the Arthurian Legend.

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Question 040 - Sheltand
Wikicommons by Ruth Sharville / Fair Isle from the north
Which strange name would match the strange place before you?
The River Avon
The North Downs
The Thames Estuary
Shetland
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Shetland is a one-of-a-kind place. Surrounded by other islands, its history includes mining and subsistence farming on the unforgiving hillsides. Today, its money comes from the vast oil below it.

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Question 030 - Grisedale Tarn
Wikicommons by Peer Lawther from Leeds, United Kingdom
Ancient glaciers carved this landscape. What is its name?
Grisedale Tarn
The Devil's Appendix
Cautley Spout
Pass of Killiecrankie
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Grisedale Tarn earns its last name from how it was formed. Tarns are lakes created by the act of a glacier carving out a depression in the land, which later forms a lake.

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Question 016 - The Severn Bore
Wikicommons by Ruth Sharville / Severn Bore near Over Bridge, Gloucester
This place has witnessed the passage of time like no other. What is it?
Fingal's Cave
High Cliff
The Severn Bore
South Downs
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The Severn River is the longest river in the UK, and when it empties into the ocean, something very strange happens. It develops the Severn Bore, a strange phenomenon when the tidal forces of the ocean collide with the river, creating a wave of water that travels upstream!

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Question 025 - Dennis Forest
RichWalking via YouTube
It would be a shame if places like this were to fade away. What is this one called?
The Forest of Dennis
The Three Peaks
The River Usk
Bodmin Moor
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The Heart of England Forest charity was funded by publisher Felix Dennis, hence the affectionate nickname. A new forest in the truest sense of the word, it is comprised entirely of native British species, ensuring that the landscape remains unique in the world.

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Question 035 - Cautley Spout
Wikicommons by Darren Copley from Sheffield
The height of this thing is just astonishing! Can you remember its name?
Cautley Spout
John o' Groats
The North Downs
Land's End
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Cautley Spout is the highest above-ground cascade waterfall in England. That reads as a lot of caveats, but it is important to be specific. After all, in England there are other waterfalls that have greater unbroken falls, and there are longer ones.

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Question 022 - Glyder Fawr
Wikicommons by Alan Butterworth / Glyder Fawr from Glyder Fach
A site that looks as though it were created for a role in a film! What's it called?
Glyder Fawr
The Three Peaks
Arthur's Seat
The River Usk
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

With a peak elevation at 3,284, the craggy Glyder Fawr is the highest mountain peak in the Glyderau Mountains. Created in part by the dissolution of glaciers which deposited rocks all around the area, the mountain's name is derived from the Welsh for "heap of rocks".

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Question 034 - The Devil's Appendix
Wikicommons by Mick Knapton at the English language Wikipedia
This foreboding place looks like something from a dream! What do you think it is named?
The Devil's Appendix
Pass of Killiecrankie
Land's End
Drumochter Pass
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The tallest waterfall in Wales, The Devil's Appendix isn't a very powerful waterfall. As a result, it does not flow all year, turning what was a waterfall into a surface for climbers for part of the year.

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Question 026 - Arthur's Seat
Wikicommons by Immanuel Giel
This dead volcano must have been impressive in its heyday. What is it called?
Arthur's Seat
Cautley Spout
Grisedale Tarn
The Blackwater
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Arthur's Seat has not erupted in an eternity, instead providing Edinburgh with its unique landscape. Topping out at an elevation of 823 feet, it is unclear why it is called "Arthur's Seat," but one theory points to the Arthurian legend.

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Question 032 - The Fens
Wikicommons by Chris Stafford / The Redundant Church
You would likely come across many a church in this area. What do you see?
Cautley Spout
The Firth of Forth
The Fens
The Devil's Appendix
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The Fens, also called The Fenlands, is the lowest place in the UK, similar in many ways to parts of Holland. This area has been home to a plethora of churches and monasteries since the Dark Ages.

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Question 07 - Wookey Hole
Wikicommons by Jim Champion / Wookey Hole caves
What is the name of this fascinating landmark?
Wookey Hole
The Old Man of Storr
Malham Cove
Loch Ness
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The Wookey Hole Caves aren't just for spelunkers, but for families, as it has turned into a genuine tourist attraction, complete with a crazy golf course and special events for children at Christmas. It is worth noting that the double o in Wookey Hole is pronounced like the double o in snooker, not as in Wookiee.

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Question 036 - Pass of Killiecrankie
Wikicommons by Photochrom Print Collection
Gandalf would not look out of place here. Where are we?
Sheltand
Drumochter Pass
Pass of Killiecrankie
The North Downs
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The Pass of Killiecrankie is an important mountain pass in Scotland. It is also near the location of the Battle of Killiecrankie, fought by the Jacobites.

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Question 020 - South Downs
Wikicommons by Gottik666 at English Wikipedia
Some places in Britain look truly idyllic, and this is one such place. Can you remember its name?
Glyder Fawr
The Weald
The New Forest
South Downs
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The South Downs include the biggest national park in the UK, which is actually larger than the chalk hills which characterize the South Downs. With a landscape shaped by grazing animals, it's no surprise that the South Downs have their own breed of sheep: Southdown sheep.

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Question 03 - Northey Island
Wikicommons by terry joyce / Northey Island
This humble place has some fascinating history. What is it?
The Wash
Wookey Hole
Ben Nevis
Northey Island
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Northey Island is a windswept island in Essex connected to the mainland by a sandbar which disappears at high tide. It was the site of a massive Viking invasion in 991 AD that presaged the conquest of England by Swain Forkbeard of Denmark.

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Question 039 - Dunnet Head
Wikicommons by Wilson44691
What is the name of this chilly place?
Dunnet Head
The North Downs
The Thames Estuary
Sheltand
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Dunnet Head is the most northerly place in the mainland UK, sitting just to the north of the nearby town of John o' Groats. There are more northerly places in the UK, but they are all outlying islands.

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Question 031 - The Blackwater
Wikicommons by Terryjoyce
A placid place, no? What do you think it's called?
Drumochter Pass
The Blackwater
The Firth of Forth
The Fens
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The Blackwater Estuary faces east from Maldon, and not only fosters important local birds and fish, but it's also an important historical site, the Anglo-Saxon structures and fishing gear frequently emerging from land and sea. This is where Maldon salt comes from!

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Question 02 - Beachy Head
Wikicommons by Arild VÃ¥gen
What a view! Do you know the name of this place?
Cheddar Gorge
Beachy Head
The Jurassic Coast
Stump Cross Caverns
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Beachy Head is part of the many chalky cliffs along the southeast coast of England. Resembling the wall of a fortress, much of what keeps Britain safe from invasion resides in the geology of its surroundings.

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Question 037 - Drumochter Pass
Wikicommons by Stuart Meek
What could be more magical than this place? What could it be named?
Drumochter Pass
John o' Groats
Sheltand
Land's End
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Drumochter Pass is where the southern and northern highlands meet, where the water looks like it doesn't know where to go because it can flow in either direction. Were this pass to snow in, the highlands would become far less accessible.

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Question 012 - Malham Cove
Wikicommons by © Francis C. Franklin
This edifice is just shocking. What's it called?
Malham Cove
The Severn Bore
Salisbury Plain
Stump Cross Caverns
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Malham Cove was once a waterfall, many thousands of years ago. The waterfall drained a prehistoric glacier, now long gone. Atop Malham Cove is what is called its limestone pavement, a location perhaps most recognized from its appearance in a "Harry Potter" film.

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Question 024 - New Forest
Wikicommons by Chris Sampson
The air here smells fresh and the sounds are peaceful. Which name matches this place?
The River Usk
The Three Peaks
Bodmin Moor
The New Forest
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Like many "new" things in the UK, The New Forest is not new, being named a royal forest by William the Conqueror. It remains one of the only unenclosed forests in England.

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Question 023 - The Weald
Wikicommons by DimiTalen
This place holds an important place in history. What is it called?
The Forest of Dennis
Arthur's Seat
The Weald
The Three Peaks
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The Weald, meaning "The Woodland" in Old English, holds an important place in British history. Specifically, it is the place where Henry VIII's regime began production of iron cannon, which, being far cheaper than bronze cannon, could be mounted shipboard, forming the teeth of the British Navy.

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You Got:
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Wikicommons by Sumit Surai