Bwlch Mawr

Bwlch Mawr
Highest point
Elevation 510 m (1,670 ft)
Prominence 145 m (476 ft)
Listing HuMP, Sub-Marilyn
Coordinates 53°00′17″N 4°20′46″W / 53.0048°N 4.3462°W / 53.0048; -4.3462Coordinates: 53°00′17″N 4°20′46″W / 53.0048°N 4.3462°W / 53.0048; -4.3462
Naming
Translation big pass (Welsh)
Geography
Location Gwynedd, Wales
OS grid SH 427478
Topo map OS Landranger 123 / Explorer 254

Bwlch Mawr is a hill near the northeastern corner of the Llŷn Peninsula in the community of Clynnog in the county of Gwynedd in North Wales.

Its name is an odd one for a hill, as it means "big pass" in English. It forms the eastern half of a wider upland area, the highest point of which is the 522 m summit of Gyrn Ddu, though it is Bwlch Mawr on which the Ordnance Survey constructed a trig point.

Geology

In common with a number of other isolated hills in Llŷn, Bwlch Mawr is formed by an igneous intrusion of Palaeozoic age.[1]

Access

A single public footpath crosses the southern flanks of the hill but the upper parts of Bwlch Mawr are designated as open country under the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 and therefore freely available to walkers. In the northwest a bridleway runs south from the village of Clynnog-fawr to the edge of open country.[2]

References

  1. British Geological Survey ‘Geology of Britain Viewer'
  2. Ordnance Survey Explorer map 254 'Lleyn Peninsula East/Pen Llyn Ardal Ddwyreiniol'

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/14/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.