PhotosLocation


beinn+odhar+glen+artney Latitude and Longitude:

56°17′40″N 4°03′55″W / 56.2945°N 4.0653°W / 56.2945; -4.0653
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Beinn Odhar (Glen Artney))

Beinn nan Eun
Highest point
Elevation631 m (2,070 ft) [1]
Prominence142 m (466 ft) [2]
ListingHu,Tu,Sim, D,sMa,GT,DN,Y [3]
Coordinates 56°17′40″N 4°03′55″W / 56.2945°N 4.0653°W / 56.2945; -4.0653
Naming
English translation Scottish Gaelic: 'Hill of the Bird'
Geography
Location Perth and Kinross, Scotland
Parent rangeGlen Artney Hills, Southern Uplands
OS grid NN 7236 1311
Topo map OS Landranger 57

Beinn nan Eun is a hill in the Glen Artney Hills range immediately south of the Highland Boundary Fault, part of the Central Lowlands of Scotland. The second highest hill of the range, it does not share a boundary with Stirlingshire unlike its neighbour, Uamh Bheag. [4] An impressive crag drops from its eastern side. Most ascents begin in Glen Artney itself to the north and take in the neighbouring hills, usually in an anti-clockwise direction, leaving it until last. [5]

Subsidiary SMC Summits

Summit Height (m) Listing [6]
Beinn Odhar 626 Tu,Sim,DT,GT,DN [7]

References

  1. ^ "Mountain Search".
  2. ^ "RHB: The Grahams and the New Donalds 1999".
  3. ^ "Mountain Search".
  4. ^ "New Donalds Map".
  5. ^ "Mountain Search".
  6. ^ "Database of British and Irish Hills: User guide".
  7. ^ "Mountain Search".

beinn+odhar+glen+artney Latitude and Longitude:

56°17′40″N 4°03′55″W / 56.2945°N 4.0653°W / 56.2945; -4.0653
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Beinn Odhar (Glen Artney))

Beinn nan Eun
Highest point
Elevation631 m (2,070 ft) [1]
Prominence142 m (466 ft) [2]
ListingHu,Tu,Sim, D,sMa,GT,DN,Y [3]
Coordinates 56°17′40″N 4°03′55″W / 56.2945°N 4.0653°W / 56.2945; -4.0653
Naming
English translation Scottish Gaelic: 'Hill of the Bird'
Geography
Location Perth and Kinross, Scotland
Parent rangeGlen Artney Hills, Southern Uplands
OS grid NN 7236 1311
Topo map OS Landranger 57

Beinn nan Eun is a hill in the Glen Artney Hills range immediately south of the Highland Boundary Fault, part of the Central Lowlands of Scotland. The second highest hill of the range, it does not share a boundary with Stirlingshire unlike its neighbour, Uamh Bheag. [4] An impressive crag drops from its eastern side. Most ascents begin in Glen Artney itself to the north and take in the neighbouring hills, usually in an anti-clockwise direction, leaving it until last. [5]

Subsidiary SMC Summits

Summit Height (m) Listing [6]
Beinn Odhar 626 Tu,Sim,DT,GT,DN [7]

References

  1. ^ "Mountain Search".
  2. ^ "RHB: The Grahams and the New Donalds 1999".
  3. ^ "Mountain Search".
  4. ^ "New Donalds Map".
  5. ^ "Mountain Search".
  6. ^ "Database of British and Irish Hills: User guide".
  7. ^ "Mountain Search".

Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook