Milk Hill

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Elevation295 m (968 ft)[1]
Prominence148 m (486 ft)
Coordinates51°22′40″N 1°51′07″W / 51.37766°N 1.85196°W / 51.37766; -1.85196
Milk Hill
Milk Hill
Highest point
Elevation295 m (968 ft)[1]
Prominence148 m (486 ft)
ListingHardy, County top
Coordinates51°22′40″N 1°51′07″W / 51.37766°N 1.85196°W / 51.37766; -1.85196
Geography
Milk Hill is located in Wiltshire
Milk Hill
Milk Hill
Milk Hill in Wiltshire
LocationWiltshire,  England
Parent rangeNorth Wessex Downs
OS gridSU104643
Topo mapOS Landranger 165

Milk Hill, located near Alton Priors east of Devizes, is the highest point in the county of Wiltshire, southwest England, at some 295 m (968 ft) above sea level[1] (the adjacent Tan Hill rises to 294 m). It is the location of the Alton Barnes White Horse (a hill figure cut in 1812).

On 23 August 2009, the BBC programme Countryfile featured an item on analysis by Ordnance Survey to determine whether Milk or Tan Hill is the higher. It was confirmed that Milk Hill is 26 centimetres (10.2 in) higher than Tan Hill.[2]

Alton Barnes White Horse

Located at the western edge of the Vale of Pewsey (part of the North Wessex Downs AONB), it is also the highest summit along a 50 km ridge extending all the way from the South Downs, across the southern Chilterns and into Wiltshire. Milk Hill is the second highest point between Bristol and London after Walbury Hill in West Berkshire (297 m; 974 ft), and is thus also the second highest chalk hill in the UK, again behind Walbury Hill, though it has a slightly greater prominence.

Views are extensive from here, as far as the Mendips and Cotswolds and in very clear weather as far as the Black Mountains in South Wales, making this one of the most southeasterly points in the UK from which high mountain country can be sighted.

Hang gliding/paragliding

References

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