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Wild Ways and Paths of Pleasure: Access to British waterfalls, 1500–2000
2001
Landscape Research
In Britain the rise of tourism, largely associated with the Romantic taste for landscape, encouraged travel to relatively inaccessible areas. Among travellers in search of the Picturesque and the Sublime, waterfalls were particularly popular, but these were commonly difficult and dangerous places to visit. This paper examines the impact of tourism on the evolution of the landscape at waterfall sites over a period during which people travelled to tourist centres on horseback, by coach, by rail
doi:10.1080/01426390120090111
fatcat:suc3ysq3brc3lacib72ztt5ckq