Mount Maw: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Created page with "{{Infobox hill |name=Mount Maw |county=Peeblesshire |range=Pentland Hills |picture=South ridge, Mount Maw - geograph.org.uk - 1518339.jpg |picture caption=The South ridge of M..." |
No edit summary |
||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
|height=1,755 feet | |height=1,755 feet | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Mount Maw''' is a hill of 1,755 feet in [[Pentland Hills]]. It is in the very north of [[Peeblesshire]], its summit about a mile from the bounds of [[Midlothian]]. The summit is marked with a trig point. | '''Mount Maw''' is a hill of 1,755 feet in the [[Pentland Hills]]. It is in the very north of [[Peeblesshire]], its summit about a mile from the bounds of [[Midlothian]]. The summit is marked with a trig point. | ||
The hill stands in the bifurcation of two routes: an ancient [[Roman road]] leaves the valley of the [[Lyne Water]] and passes to the east of Mount Maw up to [[Carlops]] a mile to the east, while the [[Cross Borders Drove Road]], on old drovers' tracks, follows up the upper course of the Lyne to the west, through [[Baddinsgill]]. | The hill stands in the bifurcation of two routes: an ancient [[Roman road]] leaves the valley of the [[Lyne Water]] and passes to the east of Mount Maw up to [[Carlops]] a mile to the east, while the [[Cross Borders Drove Road]], on old drovers' tracks, follows up the upper course of the Lyne to the west, through [[Baddinsgill]]. |
Latest revision as of 11:01, 20 January 2017
Mount Maw | |||
Peeblesshire | |||
---|---|---|---|
The South ridge of Mount Maw | |||
Range: | Pentland Hills | ||
Summit: | 1,755 feet NT141554 55°47’4"N, 3°22’14"W |
Mount Maw is a hill of 1,755 feet in the Pentland Hills. It is in the very north of Peeblesshire, its summit about a mile from the bounds of Midlothian. The summit is marked with a trig point.
The hill stands in the bifurcation of two routes: an ancient Roman road leaves the valley of the Lyne Water and passes to the east of Mount Maw up to Carlops a mile to the east, while the Cross Borders Drove Road, on old drovers' tracks, follows up the upper course of the Lyne to the west, through Baddinsgill.
A subsidiary top, Faw Mount (1,365 feet), stands closer by the farm at Baddinsgill and the river to the south. On the slopes to the north is found a petrifying spring.