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21 August, 22:56

Reread page 1 of "The Time Traveler's Guide to Elizabethan England". What explicit evidence tells how the people feel about Dartmoor?

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  1. 21 August, 23:04
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    Elizabethans see it as good for nothing but pasture, tin mining, and the steady water supply it provides.

    Explanation:

    "The Time Traveler's Guide to Elizabethan England" is a book that takes the reader back to the 16th century Elizabethan Period by Ian Mortimer. The book speaks about the practices and customs of that period.

    On page 1 of the book, Mortimer tells that how people used to view moor, Dartmoor. He asserts that if one would ask Devonians to describe the country, they would mention the great city of Exeter, the ports of Dartmouth, Plymouth, etc but rarely they mention or speak about Dartmoor. Dartmoor was two thousand feet high and two hundred square miles wide in area. It is because the people saw moors as good for nothing but pastures.
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