SCOTTISH BORDERS


Meaning of SCOTTISH BORDERS in English

council area, southeastern Scotland, its location along the English border roughly coinciding with the drainage basin of the River Tweed. Its rounded hills and undulating plateausincluding the Lammermuir Hills, the Moorfoot Hills, the Tweedsmuir Hills, and the Cheviot Hillsform a section of the Southern Uplands that is dissected by the valleys of the Tweed and its tributaries. Most of the population lives in these valleys, including the Teviotdale and the Lauderdale. The valley of the Tweed broadens in the east to form a fertile agricultural plain known as the Merse. Scottish Borders comprises the historic counties of Berwickshire, Peeblesshire, Roxburghshire, and Selkirkshire and the southern fringes of the historic counties of East Lothian and Midlothian. The upland moors support sheep, and the limited agricultural land, along the valley floors, grows barley and fodder crops and pastures beef cattle. The chief towns of the Scottish Borders, including Peebles, Galashiels, Selkirk, Jedburgh, and Hawick, produce woolen goods and knitwear, as do several smaller towns and villages. The larger towns, including Kelso, also serve as market centres for the surrounding agricultural area. Electronics firms have supplemented the traditional but gradually declining woolen knitwear and tweed industries. Trout and salmon fishing, grouse hunting, and moorland scenery attract tourists. Borders College has campuses in Duns, Galashiels, and Hawick, as well as in Newtown Saint Boswells, the administrative centre. Area 1,820 square miles (4,713 square km). Pop. (1999 est.) 106,400.

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