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Seeking the west coast of Yorkshire | Yorkshire

Letters Charity coffers | David Cameron | Hard crosswords | Yorkshire | Johnson’s journalism | Vaccine passports A view over the beach at Scarborough, North Yorkshire. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Observer A view over the beach at Scarborough, North Yorkshire. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Observer Wed 24 Feb 2021 13.29 EST Last modified on Wed 24 Feb 2021 14.37 EST Before asking for government bailouts (UK charities urgently call on PM to set up emergency fund, 17 February), big charities should spend their own reserves. Cancer Research UK entered the pandemic with over £300m in the bank; the National Trust had £320m. I would urge everybody to be as generous as possible to charities, but choose carefully. You don’t want to see your hard-earned gift being added to a cash pile in a bank vault.

Rock of ages: how chalk made England

Last modified on Mon 15 Mar 2021 08.00 EDT On the British Geological Survey’s map, chalk is represented by a swathe of pale, limey green that begins on the east coast of Yorkshire and curves in a sinuous green sweep down the east coast, breaking off where the Wash nibbles inland. In the south, the chalk centres on Salisbury Plain, radiating out in four great ridges: heading west, the Dorset Downs; heading east, the North Downs, the South Downs and the Chilterns. Stand on Oxford Street in the middle of the West End of London and beneath you, beneath the concrete and the London clay and the sands and gravels, is an immense block of white chalk lying there in the darkness like some vast subterranean iceberg, in places 200 metres thick. The Chalk Escarpment, as this block is known, is the single largest geological feature in Britain. Where I grew up, in a suburb of Croydon at the edge of south London, this chalk rises up from underneath the clays and gravels to form the ridge of hill

London s underground network spanning millions of miles housed top secret nuke hub | UK | News

| UPDATED: 21:00, Mon, Feb 22, 2021 Link copied London Underground: Chambers on abandoned station plans Sign up to receive our rundown of the day s top stories direct to your inbox SUBSCRIBE Invalid email When you subscribe we will use the information you provide to send you these newsletters. Sometimes they ll include recommendations for other related newsletters or services we offer. Our Privacy Notice explains more about how we use your data, and your rights. You can unsubscribe at any time. The city has been occupied for more than two millennia, and, over time, has acquired a vast number of subterranean structures and spaces. Land Registry documents previously showed two-and-a-half million miles of networks and telecommunications lines buried underneath London constructed by the Post Office, British Telecom (BT) and the Ministry of Defence (MoD) inside numerous spaces. One of which was a Postmaster General’s secret passage beneath 57 Whitehall built to protect machi

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