Aren't heathland and moorland effectively the same thing?
Jon
What point
are you making Jon?... This was your question back at the start of this discussion...
Low lying dry heaths are always manmade - mainly because the succession to forestry is quicker - wet heaths / moors are not necessarily manmade in the same fashion (i.e they will be a lot slower to turn back to forestry, same with duneland)... But they will still need intervention over time... And heather (from where the word heath derives) can be found in these habitats as well...
In other words there is a difference, best designated by soil type, altitude, geographical location and climate... But they all form part of the bigger family of "Heath"... That's if you decide a moor is a subset of a heath...
Why did you even bother with your (mis)leading question above if you had decided what your answer was - No.