Holsworthy
Holsworthy is a small English market community and civil parish in the city government district of Torridge, Devon. The county town of Exeter is 36.4 miles (58.6 kilometres) to the eastern. The River Deer, a tributary of the River Tamar, forms the western limit of the church, which includes the village of Brandis Corner. According to the 2011 census the population of Holsworthy was 2,641. Holsworthy is in the East of the Torridge area of Devon. Neighbouring churches are, to the West, Pyworthy, as well as Holsworthy Hamlets in other instructions. Holsworthy is 189.5 miles (305.0 kilometres) WSW of London and 36.4 miles (58.6 km) WNW of the county town of Exeter. The community gets on the junction of the A388 as well as A3072 roads. The community centre has to do with 140 metres (460 ft) over water level and the acme in the church has an altitude of 144 metres (472 ft). The river Deer, a tributary of the river Tamar, forms the western limit of the church. The bedrock geology of the church is completely of Bude Formation. This sort of Sedimentary bedrock was formed in the Carboniferous duration. All of the church is of Bude Development (sandstone) besides a strip of Bude Development (mudstone and siltstone), about 1,600 feet (490 m) broad, throughout the extreme north of the parish. The Bude Development forms part of the Holsworthy Group.