River Dulnain: Difference between revisions

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[[File:River Dulnain downstream of the bridge in Dulnain Bridge. - geograph.org.uk - 1192730.jpg|right|thumb|350px|The Dulnain above its junction with the Spey]]
[[File:River Dulnain downstream of the bridge in Dulnain Bridge. - geograph.org.uk - 1192730.jpg|right|thumb|350px|The Dulnain above its junction with the Spey]]
{{county|Inverness}}
The '''River Dulnain''' is a major left bank tributary of the [[River Spey]] in [[Inverness-shire]].
The '''River Dulnain''' is a major left bank tributary of the [[River Spey]] in [[Inverness-shire]].


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The name derives from the Gaelic ''tuil'' which means flood and ''ean'' which means stream and is perhaps descriptive of its reaction to rainfall.<ref>Ross, D. 2001 ''Scottish Place-names'', Birlinn, Edinburgh</ref>
The name derives from the Gaelic ''tuil'' which means flood and ''ean'' which means stream and is perhaps descriptive of its reaction to rainfall.<ref>Ross, D. 2001 ''Scottish Place-names'', Birlinn, Edinburgh</ref>


==Outside links ==
==Outside links==
{{Commons}}
{{Commons}}


== References ==
*Location map: {{wmap|57.242|-3.940|zoom=14}}
 
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
*Location map: {{wmap|57.242|-3.940|zoom=14}}


[[Category:Rivers of Inverness-shire|Dulnain]]
[[Category:Rivers of Inverness-shire|Dulnain]]

Latest revision as of 20:09, 4 May 2017

The Dulnain above its junction with the Spey

The River Dulnain is a major left bank tributary of the River Spey in Inverness-shire.

The Dulnain rises in the eastern part of the Monadhliath Mountains and flows in a generally northeastward direction through wild, uninhabited country to Sluggan, where it is crossed by a high stone arch bridge constructed by General Wade to carry a military road. (The route now forms a part of Route 7 of the National Cycle Network.)

Turning more easterly, the Dulnain passes beneath the modern A9 road which bypasses Carrbridge, the mainline railway and, in Carrbridge itself, the packhorse bridge that gives the village its name and the bridge carrying the B9153 road (former A9).

The final section flowing east-northeast to the village of Dulnain Bridge is accompanied by the A938 road. The river empties into the Spey after passing beneath the A95 road and the disused bridge of the former Strathspey railway.

Name

The name derives from the Gaelic tuil which means flood and ean which means stream and is perhaps descriptive of its reaction to rainfall.[1]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about River Dulnain)

References

  1. Ross, D. 2001 Scottish Place-names, Birlinn, Edinburgh