Online Encyclopedia

LOCH MAREE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 698 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LOCH
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MAREE
  , a fresh-
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water lake in the county of Ross and Cromarty, Scotland . Its name—of which Maroy and Mourie are older variants—does not, as is often supposed, commemorate the Virgin, but St Maelrubha, who came from Bangor in Ireland in 671 and founded a monastery at Applecross and a
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chapel (now in ruins) on Isle
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Maree . Trending in a south-easterly to north-
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westerly direction, the lake has a length of 131 M. from Kinlochewe at the head of the
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dam erected in the 16th century (or earlier) by the iron-smelters of the Cheardach Ruardh, or Red Smiddy, on the short but impetuous
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river
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Ewe by which it drains to the sea . It lies at a height of 32 ft. above sea-level; the greatest breadth is just over 2 M. at Slattadale, the mean breadth being 196 of a mile; and the greatest
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depth, 367 ft., occurs in the upper basin, the mean depth being 125 ft . Its waters cover an
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area of fully II sq. m., and its islands nearly I sq. m., while the drainage area is 171 sq. m . A remarkable feature is the large number (more than 30) and considerable area of the islands . Excepting Loch Crocach, a small lake in the Assynt
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district of Sutherlandshire, its insularity (i.e. the ratio of the
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total area of the islands to that of the water
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surface) is higher than that of any other lake in
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Great Britain, Loch
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Lomond coming next . Nearly all the islands lie north and east of Slattadale, the largest being Eilean Subhainn, or St Swithin's Isle, which contains a small lake 750 ft. long, 300 ft. broad and 64 ft. deep . For two-thirds of its length the loch is flanked by magnificent mountains . On the north-east the
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principal heights are Ben Slioch (3217 ft.), whose
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sugar-
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loaf form dominates the landscape, Ben Lair (2817) and Ben Airidh-a-Char (2593), and, on the south-west, the peaks of Ben Eay, four of which exceed 3000 ft .

End of Article: LOCH MAREE
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