England aka southern Britain also had wetland settlements, man made or modified islands, and pile dwellings.
In fact, these existed throughout Europe from the Neolithic to the Iron Age, most famously in the Alps and the Balkans).
Think of Must Farm in the Fens, Meare Lake Village and Glastonbury Lake Village in the Somerset Levels for example.
Because they're not usually called "crannogs" in England they don't appear on this map of crannogs.
It's likely there were no fewer sites in England than in the rest of Britain, however it is somewhat to do with geography - areas with more lakes have more sites. And the English wetlands where many were sited have been extensively drained for centuries and evidence for these settlements and artificial lakes has likely been obliterated in many cases.
Nevertheless there is extensive evidence for wetland and lakeshore living and modification in England, with artificial islands and pile bridges between dryland islands in wetlands, in tidal estuaries, and rivers from the Neolithic to the Iron Age.
During talks between U.S. and Iranian delegations in Pakistan, the topic of Ukraine unexpectedly came up.
While discussing U.S. guarantees in the event that Iran halts uranium enrichment and abandons the development of nuclear weapons, the Iranian side asked how the United States is fulfilling the 1994 Budapest Memorandum, in which it pledged to respect and protect Ukraine’s sovereignty.
The U.S. delegation left the question unanswered.
For the very first time ever an Ukrainian drone attacked a Russian shadow fleet tanker in the Mediterranean Sea.
What makes it also interesting is that no USV was used but a grenade dropping drone.
The message is clear: no Russian tanker, no matter where, is safe.