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XX.—Geology of the Outer Hebrides. Part IV.—South Harris

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2012

Extract

Harris is supposed to derive its name from the Gaelic “na hardibh,” a designation signifying “the heights.” The term is appropriate in that the most mountainous parts of the Long Island lie within its boundaries.

South Harris forms a natural geographical division for it is divided, from North Harris by a narrow neck of iand at Tarbert separating the eastern from the western seas. This isthmus is less than half a mile across. In addition to South Harris proper, this memoir deals also with the Isle of Scalpay and neighbouring islets off the north-east coast, the Isle of Taran-say on the north-west, and several islands off the south-west coast in the Sound of Harris, of which the principal ones are Ensay, Killegray, Groay, Lingay, and Gilsay.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1927

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References

page 457 note * The New Statistical Account of Scotland, 1845, vol. xiv, p. 155Google Scholar.

page 461 note * A Description of the Western Isles of Scotland, 1819, vol. i, pp. 163170Google Scholar.

page 461 note † Trans. Roy. Soc. Edin., vol. xxviii, pt. ii, 18771878, pp. 546549Google Scholar.

page 462 * A Vertebrate Fauna of the Outer Hebrides, by Harvie-Brown, J. A. and Buckley, T. E., with notes by Prof. Heddle, 1888, pp. 232235Google Scholar.

page 462 note † The Great Ice Age, 3rd ed., 1894, pp. 82, 156–159.

page 462 note ‡ Ibid., p. 293.

page 473 note * Heddle, M. P., Trans. Roy. Soc. Edin., vol. xxviii, 1879, p. 252Google Scholar; “The Geology of the Country around Banff, Huntly, and Turriff,” Mem. Geol. Surv., 1923, p. 97.

page 485 note * Campbell, and Lunn, , Min. Mag., vol. xx, No. 110, p. 435Google Scholar.

page 486 note * Some of the most beautifully glaciated and striated surfaces in South Harris are seen on the band of peridotite rock just north of the north-western extremity of Loch Langavat.