From Wiki . . . The Scottish watershed is the drainage divide in - TopicsExpress



          

From Wiki . . . The Scottish watershed is the drainage divide in Scotland that separates river systems that flow to the east into the North Sea from those that flow to the west into the Atlantic Ocean. On the summit of Ben Lomond for example, looking west all water flows to the Firth of Clyde, and looking east all water flows into the Firth of Forth. Although the concept of geographical watersheds is common, the first reference to the Scottish watershed is to be found in Groomes Ordnance Gazetteer of 1884, in which the entry defines the northern terminus as being at Duncansby Head. This was followed in 1912 with the Bartholomew Atlas Survey (NLS) which shows the entire geographic feature, from the border with England to Duncansby Head. The first popular delineation of the Scottish watershed took place as recently as 1986. It was mapped out in that year by Dave Hewitt, who in 1987 then walked the line of the watershed from south to north.[1] Six people have done versions of the route: * Hewitt walked from the Anglo-Scottish border to Cape Wrath in a single push, April–June 1987 * the late Mike Allen walked from Lands End to Cape Wrath in numerous mainly short sections, April 1988–October 1994 * Martin Prouse walked from Rowardennan to Ben Hope in one go, July–August 1994 * Peter Wright walked from the Anglo-Scottish border to Duncansby Head in eight sections, Jan–Oct 2005 [2] * Malcolm Wylie completed a 131-day traverse of the UK, in 14 sections - Scottish sections 1996 and 2,000 - Peel Fell to Duncansby Head. * Colin Meek completed watershed run in 27 days in summer 2012 - Peel Fell to Duncansby Head. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_watershed
Posted on: Fri, 21 Mar 2014 20:52:44 +0000

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