Vale
In geography a vale is a wide river valley, usually with a particularly wide flood plain or flat valley bottom. Vales commonly occur between the scarp slopes of pairs of chalk
downs, where the chalk dome has been eroded, exposing less resistant underlying rock, usually clay.
List of vales
- Blackmore Vale, Dorset,
England
- Castle Vale, Birmingham, England
- Trent Vale, Staffordshire, England
- Vale of Evesham, Worcestershire, England
- Vale of Leven, West Dunbartonshire, Scotland
- Vale of Pewsey, Wiltshire, England
- Vale of Siddim (biblical)
- Vale of York, Yorkshire, England
Political divisions (towns, cities, districts, counties) named Vale or containing Vale in their names
include:
- United States of America
- Cedar Vale, Kansas
- Kenton Vale, Kentucky
- La Vale, Maryland
- Meadow Vale, Kentucky
- Montvale, New Jersey
- Northvale, New Jersey
- River Vale, New Jersey
- Union Vale, New York
- Vale, North
Carolina
- (also note Vail, Colorado, spelled differently)
- Great Britain
- Aylesbury Vale, Buckinghamshire, England
- Eagle Vale, New
South Wales, Wales
- Ebbw Vale, Blaenau
Gwent, Wales
- Vale of Glamorgan, Glamorgan, Wales
- Vale of White Horse, Oxfordshire England
- Vale Royal, Cheshire,
North West England
Other Vales
See also: List of landforms.
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