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Yorkshire Wolds

The Yorkshire Wolds are an area of low hills and valleys in Yorkshire. They are formed from chalk, and make an arc from the Humber estuary west of Kingston-upon-Hull up to the North Sea coast between Bridlington[?] and Scarborough. Here they rise up to form cliffs, most notably at Flamborough[?], Bempton Cliffs and Filey[?]; Flamborough Headland is designated a Heritage Coast.

To the north are the North York Moors[?], and to the east the hills flatten into the plain of Holderness[?].

On the western edge the wolds rise to an escarpment which then drops sharply to the Vale of York. The highest point of this is 200 metres above sea level at Garrowby Hill, 8 km north of the town of Pocklington[?].

Administratively the area is part of the East Riding of Yorkshire; the largest town in the wolds is Driffield[?].

One of nine National Trails in England, the Wolds Way[?] is a long-distance footpath which runs the length of the wolds from the Humber Bridge at Hessle[?] to Bridlington[?] on the coast. It is funded by the Countryside Commission[?].

The writer Winifred Holtby[?] described the wolds as "fold upon fold of the encircling hills, piled rich and golden."

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