This printable crossword puzzle on the topic of Physical Geography has 30 clues. Answers range from 3 to 15 letters long. This crossword is also available to download as a Microsoft Word document or a PDF.
It's either a rocky outcrop on a hill or a rocky peak
Dartmoor Tors and some kitchen worktops have this rock in common.
The Tors on Dartmoor started to form when cooled ----- pushed its way through the mountain ranges
How are paths made on Dartmoor?
High rainfall and what type of rock causes areas of standing water and peat bogs?
The process which causes rocks on Dartmoor to break down.
Sheep farming rather than crop growing on Dartmoor is due to the - - - - - - nature of the soil
Granite is what type of rock?
The water process causing cracks and crevices in the rocks to get bigger, and the process which has caused Leather Tor to look like jumbled piles and heaps of granite (6,3,4)
A stone pit on Dartmoor from which stone was extracted to supply products to build London Bridge (6,6)
There are eight of these on Dartmoor supplying water.
Its thirsty work building these boundaries (3,5,7)
At the base of Tors these rock piles and heaps jumble.
Animal feed and green in colour
Open landscape of Dartmoor dominated by heathers, gorse and grass with a scattering of bushes and trees
Found in the lower areas and covered by trees
Where rivers flow fast and low
Activity where sheep are kept upland (4,7)
Owners and their dogs may like to climb this tourist attraction
Popular with tourists and experienced rock climbers alike
Erosion and weathering of this type of rock exposed the tors on Dartmoor
Close lines on a map showing the steep hills on Dartmoor
Changed rock squeezed or heated to form hornfels on Dartmoor
- - - - - - - causes pollution, congestion and the erosion of Dartmoor.
The extreme _ _ _ _ _ _ _ of Dartmoor is determined by the higher altitude and its exposed nature
Dartmoor being one of these is an area of natural beauty and historical importance protected for the enjoyment of the general public and the preservation of wildlife
Metal once extracted above ground and later underground from granite rock
The signage across Dartmoor aiming to reduce the negative impact of tourists on Dartmoor (4,4,4)
Sitting near the centre of Dartmoor where east meets west and river waters flow
A tourism activity the postman might like