The Whitehaven Coast, Cumbria
View of Purbeck Beach below Emmetts Hill, Dorset, looking west and taken at sunset
A view of the Blakeney Point landscape at sunset
A view across some sandy flats at Blakeney Point during low tide, towards the horizon boats are anchored in the water and there is a bright orange glow from the setting sun
Remains of insutrial workings on the Whitehaven Coast, Cumbria
View along the Whitehaven Coast, Cumbria
View of Dunstanburgh Castle from the north west taken in the dusk twilight and showing the incoming tide
View of Dunstanburgh Castle from the north west in the late afternoon light
View of the rocky causeway under Lindisfarne Castle taken in the afternoon light
From Willapark Head showing almost all Neptune property sweeping away south-westwards culminating in Barras Nose with Tintagel Castle
Looking across Morecombe Bay from Heysham Head with a limestone oucrop, the vast estuarial flats of the Bay at low tide and the central Lake District Fells in the far distance
Thr south-east corner of England where the rounded outline of the North Downs, meet the sea in the spectacular chalk, White Cliffs of Dover
Altacorry Bay viewed from Ballyconagan, with the East Lighthouse just visible in the far distance
Sunset at Murlough Bay, looking north west towards Fair Head, Northern Ireland
Basalt pillars stand below Crockamore Plateau at Fair Head, County Antrim
These dolerite cliffs rise 600ft. above the sea at Fair Head & Murlough Bay, County Antrim.
Close view of the unusual sculptured pillars of the exposed layers of basalt, mainly hexagonal in shape, of the Giant's Causeway, a designated World Heritage Site
Sunset view of bays, headlands and rock structure at The Giant's Causeway
View of the rocky coastline at Giant's Causeway
A view of the sea and beach pebbles at Blakeney point, the view looking out towards a sandy bank depicts a starfish in the foreground with the water swirling around it
The Giant's Causeway, Co. Antrim
The mosaic effect of seawater and stones on this Durham Coast beach which was once blackened by coal spoilings, now cleansed by the sea since mining waste ceased being dumped
A colourful shingle beach at Blakeney Point, Norfolk, there are some birds eggs in the foreground