What is the character of the hill?

The character of the hill is a work of art created by carving into the lawn of the hill to reveal the base or subsoil. Usually the characters are very large, designed to see from a long distance, and are often placed so that people at the bottom of the hills can clearly see the character. Great Britain has a huge number of such works of art, which leads many people to combine characters on a hill with England, although they can also be found in other regions of the world. Traces of characters from the hills have been discovered for thousands of years, and many of them have been several hundred years. Such numbers can simply be artistic or can be intended as honors to different mythological individuals. Horses and people are ordinary objects of characters downhill, sometimes even depicted together.

English geology is particularly suitable for creating characters on a hill because Britain has a large amount of chalk subsoil. When this white rock is exposed, it excels against the surrounding lawn and shrub. A picture of a hill can beAlso filled with different color materials for contrast, and sometimes things like glass bottles will be used on the hill to create the desired texture.

If the character of the hill is not maintained, eventually disappears. The surrounding lawn hits, re -covers the character of the hill, and the exposed rock can be eroded over time and wins the details of the character of the hill. In response to this problem, several companies of preserving the characters Hill have appeared. These groups perform routine maintenance on the characters of the hills in their area, keep the lawn back and occasionally re -power the chalk or other material in the picture on the hill to endure it.

While many people connect Hill figures with Celtic art and prehistoric times, most of the oldest surviving hills such as Gigant Cerne Abbas and a long man from Wilmington is in fact from the 18th century. The oldest existing hill figure seems to be a Uffington white horse whoThe rice dates back to the Bronze Age, but the countless others were undoubtedly lost over the centuries.

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