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Ullswater
Sproxton, Jan. 5.
Mr. URBAN,
IN a tour to the Lakes last Summer, I observed a piece of
flat ground consisting chiefly of sand and pebbles, which,
within forty years, to my knowledge, had been gained from
the Lake of Ulleswater by the floods of a rapid brook
rolling down earth, stones, and gravel, from the adjoining
mountains, &c. which must have been an immense quantity,
as the water was ten fathom deep or more, a few yards only
from the
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