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Cornwall is a peninsula bounded seaward by the
English Channel and the Atlantic Ocean and landward by Devon. It terminates
in the west with the rugged promontory of Land's End.
The region is a low-lying plateau, rising
to its greatest height at Brown Willy (1,375 ft/419 m) in Bodmin Moor.
The principal rivers are the Tamar, which forms most of the border with
Devon, the Fowey, the Fal, and the Camel.
In the lush river valleys are productive vegetable and dairy farms. The
uplands are used for sheep and cattle pastures. The climate is mild and
moist, with subtropical vegetation along the southern coast. Various types
of fish are caught, including pilchard, that are not plentiful elsewhere
in Britain. Engineering, ship repairing, rock quarrying, and tourism are
major industries. Cornish tin and copper mines were known to ancient Greek
traders, and during World War II the old mines were reworked. Cornwall's
climate, coastal towns (Penzance, Falmouth, Land's End, and St. Ives),
and the romance of its past, interwoven with Arthurian legend and tales
of piracy, have made the region popular with tourists.
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