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Five Glens of Angus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

56°49′48″N 2°56′24″W / 56.830°N 2.940°W / 56.830; -2.940 The Five Glens of Angus are the five Highland glens located in the western portion of the Angus region of Scotland. The five glens from westernmost to easternmost are:

Glen Clova is remarkable for its glaciated landscape, with the deep trough-heads of Glen Doll and Corrie Fee, an array of classic corries (glacial cirques) along its NE rim - notably Corrie Bonhard, Corrie of Clova, Corrie Brandy and Corrie Wharrel, and a cluster of diverse "rock slope failures" (rock slides, avalanches, and deformations) including The Rives on Cairn Broadlands, and several in the corries [1]

Glen Clova's 1940s postwoman, Jean Cameron, changed the uniform for women, having asked to wear trousers for her rounds, they were named 'Camerons' after her.[2]

In 2015 red kites at the Gannochy estate in Glenesk were found to have been stealing swimmers' clothing to line their nest.[3]

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  • Angus Glens Walking Festival 2014
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Transcription

See also

References

  1. ^ David Jarman, Rock slope failures: the isolated Glen Clova grouping, in Wishart A. Mitchell & Ailsa Guild, The Quaternary of Glen Clova & Strathmore, QRA Field Guide, 2019, pp.150-175
  2. ^ "The Coming of the Camerons | Scotland on Screen". scotlandonscreen.org.uk. Retrieved 9 December 2021.
  3. ^ "Birds of prey target swimmers' underwear to line nests". BBC. 23 June 2016.

External links

This page was last edited on 24 July 2022, at 13:41
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