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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › North_SlobNorth Slob - Wikipedia

    The North Slob is an area of mud-flats at the estuary of the River Slaney at Wexford Harbour, Ireland. The North Slob is an area of 10 km 2 (2,500 acres) that was reclaimed in the mid-19th century by the building of a sea wall. It is the lowest geographical point on the island of Ireland.

  2. Wexford Harbour ( gaélico, Loch Garman) en el condado de Wexford, Irlanda es la bahía natural en la desembocadura del río Slaney. El estuario originalmente tenía diez millas de ancho en su punto más amplio, con grandes llanuras de lodo en ambos lados. Se conocen como el North Slob y el South Slob de la palabra irlandesa slab, que significa lodo.

    • Early History
    • The 17th Century
    • Cromwell
    • Act of Union
    • Destruction of The Harbour by Drainage Works
    • World War I

    Vikings arrived from Norway in 819 AD and founded the city of Wexford calling it Waes Fjord, meaning 'inlet of the mudflats', and the modern name has evolved from this. Over the course of about 300 years, the Norse settled in Wexford, intermarried with the local population and gradually converted to Christianity. They forged temporary alliances wit...

    Wexford became a major maritime port exporting fish, cloth, wool and hides. It was Ireland's leading fishing port in the 15th and 16th century exporting mainly to ports along the west coast of England and Wales. In 1642, the Dublin government in a dispatch from London described Wexford as "a place plentiful in ships and seamen, and where the rebels...

    By the mid-1640s, the privateering community of Irish, Flemish and French based in Wexford had a fleet of 200 cargo ships and 21 frigates whose purpose was to attack English ships between Biscay and the Baltic. Within a few years this fleet had doubled. However, it could not last. In 1649, a parliamentary army under Oliver Cromwelllanded in Dublin ...

    In 1764 the historian Amyas Griffith wrote that Wexford's chief export was corn (2 million barrels per year), herrings, beer, beef, hides, tallow, butter etc. and they trade to all parts of the globe but in particular to Liverpool, Barbados, Dublin, Norway and Bordeaux. The town continued to experience expansion and economic growth and in 1772 two ...

    In the 19th century, dykes were built and pumping systems installed to drain the slobs, producing fine agricultural land below sea level in polders similar to those in the Netherlands. The size of the harbour was reduced considerably. What was left was mostly shallow and up to today suffers from serious siltproblems. The tides and currents of the r...

    During World War I the US Navy operated a naval air station, known as U.S. Naval Air Station Wexford, at Ferrybankon the eastern side of the harbour.

  3. Enlarge image. The North Slob in Wexford was created in the middle of the 1800s by the building of a sea wall on the northern side of Wexford Harbour. Roughly 1,000 hectares of mudflats were reclaimed and this area was then turned into agricultural land similar to the Dutch polders. However, it is the remaining 200 hectares of the North Slob ...

  4. El North Slope es una región del estado estadounidense de Alaska con una superficie de 230.500 km². Gran parte de la región se encuentra en el borough de North Slope. Limita al sur con la vertiente norte de la cordillera de Brooks y al norte con el mar de Chukotka y el mar de Beaufort, mares marginales del océano Ártico .

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CastlebridgeCastlebridge - Wikipedia

    Castlebridge is the founding place of the Guinness Book of World Records. [5] On 10 November 1951, Sir Hugh Beaver, then the managing director of the Guinness Breweries, went on a shooting party in the North Slob, by the River Slaney in County Wexford, Ireland.

  6. www.askaboutireland.ie › wexford › wexford-sloblandsSloblands

    The Wexford Sloblands provide an ideal environment to a large proportion of Ireland’s plants, birds and wild mammal species. Located to the north of Wexford Harbour, the Wexford Sloblands lie below sea level on flat polder land covering 1,000-hectares. Until the mid-1800s, 2,500 acres of mud flats and many small islands spread across Wexford ...