uplands in English

noun
1
a city in southwestern California, east of Los Angeles and north of Ontario; population 72,091 (est. 2008).
noun
1
an area of high or hilly land.
conservation of areas of upland

Use "uplands" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "uplands" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "uplands", or refer to the context using the word "uplands" in the English Dictionary.

1. The group that hosts the conversation Uplands residents and their Uplands Councillors.

2. Lancewood - Bendee - rosewood Landform Uplands, ranges and dissected ridges

3. Bur oak on uplands is often associated with calcareous soils

4. Only repentance leads to the sunlit uplands of a better life.

5. The Aredale series consists of very deep, well drained soils on uplands

6. Why is it not normally possible to ripen wheat or barley on the uplands?

7. The uplands of the Armorican Massif extend into Manche and western Calvados and Orne

8. Additionally, during drought this species Aestivates in uplands rather than migrating to other wetlands

9. Shadows ran down like rivers from the airy uplands, filling the depths with a gathering chill.

10. In the region as seen from the small plane, in my case the mountains and woody uplands of the Northeast?

11. The outcome will be a far cry from the sunny utopian uplands of independence many Brexiters are expecting.

12. NRC Institute for Aerospace Research (NRC-IAR) Uplands Campus, 1920 Research Road, Building U61 (near Ottawa Airport)

13. In geological terms, the uplands are consistently hilly due to former volcanic activity, with deep and slightly acidic soils.

14. The squadron reformed at RCAF Station Uplands on 21 June 1954 as 428 All-Weather Fighter Squadron.

15. 5 It is axiomatic that traditional agricultural management of the uplands has maintained and conserved these landscapes and their wildlife.

16. Bothies are found in the Highlands and Islands, Southern Uplands, Northumberland, Cumbria and Wales in remote and usually upland areas

17. Lowlands and plains are small and scattered, mostly lying along the coast and composed of alluvial lowlands and diluvial uplands.

18. The Avebury monuments cluster around the headwaters of the upper Kennet valley in north Wiltshire, close to the northern edge of the Wessex chalk uplands

19. The Appling series consists of very deep, well drained, moderately permeable soils on ridges and side slopes of the Piedmont uplands

20. Bibb is considered one of the counties of the "Black Belt", which originally referred to the fertile dark soil in these uplands

21. Canals are artificial waterways that modify existing rivers or streams; or are dug into wetlands or uplands for navigation, drainage and flood control, irrigation, access, and recreation

22. 22 It is likely that the report will provide added ammunition to environmentalists who have for long opposed the blanket afforestation of uplands.

23. Brittany belongs to the ancient uplands of the Armorican Massif and is generally low-lying, with a mean elevation of 341 feet (104 metres)

24. Traditionally, these natural features made possible several different types of agriculture, including wet-rice farming in the valleys and shifting cultivation in the uplands.

25. The coastal uplands and a belt of Brigalow grasslands lie between the coast and the mountains, while inland of the dividing range are large areas of grassland.

26. In the family Corvidae (order Passeriformes) are the common Chough (Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax), of sea cliffs and rocky uplands from the British Isles to China, and the alpine Chough (P

27. We aim to produce the best bred Epagneul Bretons in the US that are the quintessential dog for the uplands and the home: demons in the field & angels in the home!

28. As can be observed on the physical map of Belgium there are three main geographical regions to Belgium: the coastal plain to the northwest, the central plateau, and the Ardennes uplands to …

29. This is particularly apparent in Bavaria’s uplands and in the foothills of the Alps, where use of meadows and pastures predominates over arable farming and the climatic and topographical conditions favour typical Bavarian cattle production.

30. Cheshire, geographic and historic county and former administrative county of northwestern England, bordering Wales to the west, fronting the Dee and Mersey estuaries to the northwest, and flanked by the Pennine uplands, partly within the Peak District National Park, to the east

31. The 10.2 ha parcel of land offered in exchange is located adjacent to the Cape Jourimain NWA and is of known biological value, and includes an important songbird migration corridor connecting Jourimain and Trenholm Islands with the uplands (the abandoned rail alignment).

32. Charente River, river in western France, about 225 miles (360 km) long, rising near Rochechouart in the Limousin uplands (Haute-Vienne département), on the margin of the Massif Central, and flowing generally westward to the Bay of Biscay

33. Climate: tropical; rainy season (May to October); dry season (November to April); tropical on coast; temperate in uplands Terrain: mostly mountains with narrow coastal belt and central plateau The lowest point of elevation in El Salvador is the Pacific Ocean, at sea level.

34. Collared pikas, Ochotona collaris, are found in the mountainous regions of central and southeastern Alaska, in the Yukon-Tanana uplands to the Chigmit Mountains, and from the Richardson Mountains north of the Artic circle in the Yukon, west of the Mackenzie River in the Northwest Territories, and south into northwestern British Columbia (MacDonald and Jones, 1987).