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Footage was shot on the Mavic Mini, set on 2.7K. 30FPS, 4K post production, using Power Director. Weather was overcast/cloudy with some sun. Footage was shot with the help of a Freewell CPL lense. Wind speeds 5-12mph. Let me know in the comments where you would like me to fly next👍🏽 ❤Thanks for the subs peep's, nearly on 1K. Help me reach my goal❤ Music: 🎵 Big Sur. Midway Music. 🎵 Spiritual Invasion. Cruen. 🌐 Like, share and Subscribe. Trying to reach 1k 📲 Instagram: / throughthelens85 🚫For copyright matters, please contact me on: tazuddin@hotmail.com🚫 ===================================== The Lake District is relatively young as a tourist attraction. Before the hordes of visitors arrived, drawn to the poetic picture created by William Wordsworth and others, these rugged lands were primarily used for farming, mining, and defence. The area is rich in history and during your visit you may encounter Neolithic monuments, Roman forts, Medieval castle ruins, or fine examples of Georgian architecture. What follows is a brief overview of the history of these extraordinary lands. Cumbria and the Lake District were once a barren ice ensconced landscape. It’s thought that settlers briefly set up here around 12,000 years ago during a period of warming, before being forced to leave once the colder weather returned. Settlers later returned during the Mesolithic period (9600BC – 4000BC) but primarily kept themselves to coastal areas, dwelling in caves. During the Neolithic Period (4500BC – 2350BC), settlers began to move in land to the area now known as the Lake District, drawn to the rich stone resources that were used to create axes and other tools. Stone from Langdale Pike has been found amongst various Neolithic tools scattered around the country, giving rise to the suggestion that the area was akin to a stone factory for these early inhabitants. There are fine examples of Neolithic stone circles and monuments in the area, including Castlerigg which is located just outside of Keswick and set within an amphitheatre of fells, the Shap Stone Avenue, which is a series of henges, standing stones, and circles, and Long Meg and Her Daughters, a stone circle outside of Penrith overlooked by the standing stone of Long Meg. Settlements continued to grow and develop during the Bronze Age and the Iron Age, and the area remained one that featured scattered communities and farmsteads. Later, Celtic tribes began to rise, and it’s thought that Cumbria was initially part of the Carvetti tribe, and then part of the Brigantes tribe at the time of the Roman invasion of the UK.