Mainly agricultural, it stretches from the southern border with Norfolk at the Wash to the Humber in the north where it meets Yorkshire. Thus it is a region of many contrasts, going from flat, marshy land (much of it reclaimed from the sea) via the rolling Lincolnshire Wolds[?] in the middle of the county to another flat low-lying area near the major fishing port of Grimsby.
A reorganisation split off the areas of North Lincolnshire (including Scunthorpe[?]) and North East Lincolnshire (including Grimsby) as separately administered unitary authority areas.
Historically, Lincolnshire was divided into three administrative areas:
Grimsby was a county borough[?] prior to 1974, and so was a separate administrative unit, but the areas surrounding it, including Cleethorpes[?] were part of Lincolnshire.
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