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- Q7270149 subject Q15269963.
- Q7270149 subject Q15285556.
- Q7270149 subject Q8251656.
- Q7270149 subject Q8668983.
- Q7270149 abstract "Queen's Wood is a 52-acre (21 hectare) area of ancient woodland in the London Borough of Haringey, abutting Highgate Wood and lying between East Finchley, Highgate Village, Muswell Hill and Crouch End. It was originally part of the ancient Forest of Middlesex which covered much of London, Hertfordshire and Essex and was mentioned in the Domesday Book and is now one of three Local Nature Reserves in the London Borough of Haringey. It is situated a few minutes' walk away from Highgate tube station.Haringey contains four distinct ancient woods. These are Highgate Wood, Queen's Wood, Coldfall Wood and Bluebell Wood. All are shown on John Rocque's 1754 Map of Middlesex. Queen's Wood was once called Churchyard Bottom Wood, and was originally part of the Great Forest of Middlesex. It was said to be the site of a plague pit. In 1898 it was purchased from the Ecclesiastical Commissioners by Hornsey Urban District Council, and renamed Queen's Wood in honour of Queen Victoria.The wood is an ancient oak-hornbeam woodland, which features English oak and occasional beech which provide a canopy above cherry, field maple, hazel, holly, hornbeam, midland hawthorn, mountain ash and both species of lowland birch. The scarce Wild Service Tree (which is evidence of the Woods's ancient origin) is scattered throughout the wood. The Wood has a small adventure playground, but no park or playing fields, and has never been subjected to intensive management of the type practised at Highgate Wood and accordingly there is greater diversity of flora and fauna - Bantock (1984) found a significantly greater number of ground feeding birds present in the Wood when compared to Highgate Wood, which he attributed to the greater structural diversity and denser shrub layer present. Queen's Wood is a Local Nature Reserve and a Site of Metropolitan Importance for Nature Conservation.The ground flora is particularly rich given its proximity to central London (the wood is within a six-mile radius of Charing Cross railway station). It includes a large population of wood anemone, goldilocks buttercup and wood sorrel, yellow pimpernel and square-stemmed St John's wort. A survey conducted in 1984 noted 39 distinct herbaceous species and 15 different grasses native to the wood, in addition to some 23 species of tree and shrub.Despite fairly high levels of disturbance, the bird life is diverse and includes three species of woodpecker. Over one hundred species of spiders have been spotted and a nationally rare jewel beetle is widespread.".
- Q7270149 thumbnail 060729_Queens_Wood_Oaks.JPG?width=300.
- Q7270149 wikiPageExternalLink www.fqw.org.uk.
- Q7270149 wikiPageExternalLink queenswood.htm.
- Q7270149 wikiPageExternalLink wood-details.aspx?wood=24583&site=Queens-Wood.
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- Q7270149 wikiPageWikiLink Q15269963.
- Q7270149 wikiPageWikiLink Q15285556.
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- Q7270149 wikiPageWikiLink Q8251656.
- Q7270149 wikiPageWikiLink Q8668983.
- Q7270149 wikiPageWikiLink Q9439.
- Q7270149 point "51.582 -0.143".
- Q7270149 type SpatialThing.
- Q7270149 comment "Queen's Wood is a 52-acre (21 hectare) area of ancient woodland in the London Borough of Haringey, abutting Highgate Wood and lying between East Finchley, Highgate Village, Muswell Hill and Crouch End. It was originally part of the ancient Forest of Middlesex which covered much of London, Hertfordshire and Essex and was mentioned in the Domesday Book and is now one of three Local Nature Reserves in the London Borough of Haringey.".
- Q7270149 label "Queen's Wood".
- Q7270149 lat "51.582".
- Q7270149 long "-0.143".
- Q7270149 depiction 060729_Queens_Wood_Oaks.JPG.