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Mweelrea

Mweelrea (/mwlˈr/; from Irish Cnoc Maol Réidh 'bald hill with the smooth top')[4] is a mountain on the Atlantic coast of County Mayo, Ireland. Rising to 814 metres (2,671 ft), it is the highest mountain in the western province of Connacht, and is noted for its southeastern cliff-lined corries,[5][6] and its views.[7] Mweelrea overlooks Killary Harbour and is at the heart of a "horseshoe-shaped" massif that includes the peaks of Ben Lugmore and Ben Bury.[8][5] The massif is called the Mweelrea Mountains or the Mweelrea Range.[3][6]

Mweelrea
Cnoc Maol Réidh
Mweelrea and the corrie lake of Lough Bellawaum, viewed from Ben Lugmore in the east
Highest point
Elevation814 m (2,671 ft)[1]
Prominence779 m (2,556 ft)[1]
ListingCounty top (Mayo), P600, 100 Highest Irish Mountains, Marilyn, Hewitt, Arderin, Simm, Vandeleur-Lynam
Coordinates53°38′14″N 9°49′49″W / 53.63724°N 9.830358°W / 53.63724; -9.830358
Naming
English translationsmooth bald hill
Language of nameIrish
Pronunciation/mwlˈr/
Geography
Mweelrea
Location of Mweelrea in Ireland
LocationCounty Mayo, Ireland
Parent rangeMweelrea Mountains
OSI/OSNI gridL7898366810
Topo mapOSi Discovery 37
Geology
Mountain typeSandstone & conglomerate, ignimbrite bedrock[1]
Climbing
Easiest route"Silver Strand"[2]
Normal route"The Ramp" (Lug More corrie)[3]

Mweelrea is also the 26th-highest peak in Ireland on the Arderin list,[9] and the 34th-highest on the Vandeleur-Lynam list.[10][8]

Geology edit

The geology of what is known as the Mweelrea Formation is very different from that of the Twelve Bens, on the other side of Killary Harbour. At a summary level, the Mweelrea Formation consists of Ordovician period sandstones originally deposited on large alluvial fans, and distally‐equivalent alluvial plains and delta fans. Interbedded with these sandstones are tufts, being ash deposits from Ordovician period volcanos.[11][12]

Geography edit

Mweelrea, and its subsidiary peaks, form the southern half of the "horseshoe-shaped" massif of the Mweelrea Mountains, which are bounded by Killary Harbour, Ireland's deepest fjord, to the south, and Doo Lough to the north.[5][6]

The valley in the centre of this "horseshoe" is the townsland of Glenconnelly (Irish: Gleann Choinnile).[13] Two deep corries lie at the head of the Glenconnelly valley, below Mweelrea's southeast face; the southerly corrie contains Lough Lugaloughan, while the northerly corrie contains Lough Bellawaum; both are drained by the Sruhaunbunatrench River, which empties into the Bundorragha River, which itself flows into Killary Harbour.[6]

Mweelrea at 814 metres (2,671 ft), is the highest mountain in massif, and is the provincial top for Connacht.[5][6] Mweelrea's prominence of 779 metres (2,556 ft) qualifies it as a Marilyn, and it also ranks it as the 16th-highest mountain in Ireland on the MountainViews Online Database, 100 Highest Irish Mountains, where the minimum prominence threshold is 100 metres.[8][14]

Northeast of Mweelrea is Ben Bury (or Irish: Ucht an Chreagáin, meaning "breast of the little crag"; it is also known as "Oughty Craggy"), at 795 metres (2,608 ft), and whose prominence of 60 metres (200 ft) qualifies it as a Vandeleur-Lynam (it is the 43rd-highest Vandeleur-Lynam in Ireland).[8][6]

Further east around the "horseshoe" lies the long high summit ridge of Ben Lugmore (and its subsidiary peaks), that is only slightly lower than Mweelrea at 803 metres (2,635 ft), and its northeast face forms the headwall of the cliff-lined Lug More Irish: Coum Dubh corrie.[5][6]

Southwest of Mweelrea is the southern arm of the "horseshoe", which is both lower and less sustained than the northern side. It includes the Mweelrea SE Spur at 495 metres (1,624 ft) (sometimes called "point-495" in guidebooks), and finishes with the isolated Teevnabinnia (Irish: Taobh na Binne, meaning "side of the peak"), whose height is only 379 metres (1,243 ft), but whose prominence of 214 metres (702 ft) qualifies it as a Marilyn.[8][6] West of Mweelrea lie the County Mayo beaches of Uggool Beach and Silver Strand.

Recreation edit

Hill walking edit

As the highest mountain in Connacht, Mweelrea is climbed in "Four Peaks Challenge" formats, being the highest mountains in the four provinces of Ireland.[15]

The fastest and most straightforward way to summit Mweelrea is via the 8–kilometre 3-hour Silver Strand Route.[2]

A longer route is the 13-kilometre 6-hour round trip via the Lug More (or Irish: Coum Dubh) corrie and the valley of Glen Glencullin that take in the summits of Ben Bury and Ben Lugmore. A notable feature known as The Ramp is used, which crosses the headwall of this corrie at mid-way, from east to west in an upward slope; reaching the ridge of Ben Lugmore at a col with Ben Bury. While this route is direct, caution is advised in properly finding The Ramp, as the corrie has extensive cliffs.[3]

Mweelrea is also climbed as part of the 15-kilometre 6-7 hour Mweelrea Horseshoe, which is described by a notable Irish guidebook as one of "the top three" in Ireland.[5] The circuit starts and ends at the Delphi Mountain Resort, and takes in all the peaks of the massif of Mweelrea, including Ben Lugmore (and its subsidiary peaks), Ben Bury, Mweelrea and the Mweelrea SE Spur (or point 495-metres).[5][6]

Rock climbing edit

While the main rock-climbing on the Mweelrea massif is on the northeastern slopes of Ben Lugmore (see here), there are long Grade 1 and 2 scrambles on the northeastern slopes of Mweelrea/Ben Bury.[16]

Winter climbing edit

The Lough Bellawaum corrie, Mweelrea's northeastern corrie, also has a number of winter-climbs, the most notable of which are Blue Route (Grade II/III, 270 m), and Red Route (Grade III, 305 m).[17]

Gallery edit

Bibliography edit

  • Fairbairn, Helen (2014). Ireland's Best Walks: A Walking Guide. Collins Press. ISBN 978-1848892118.
  • MountainViews Online Database (Simon Stewart) (2013). A Guide to Ireland's Mountain Summits: The Vandeleur-Lynams & the Arderins. Collins Books. ISBN 978-1-84889-164-7.
  • Paul Phelan (2011). Connemara & Mayo - A Walking Guide: Mountain, Coastal & Island Walks. Collins Press. ISBN 978-1848891029.</ref>
  • Dillion, Paddy (2001). Connemara: Collins Rambler's guide. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0002201216.
  • Dillion, Paddy (1993). The Mountains of Ireland: A Guide to Walking the Summits. Cicerone. ISBN 978-1852841102.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Mweelrea". MountainViews Online Database. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Mweelrea: Silver Strand Route (Start at L76288 68802)". Mountainview.ie. This is the easiest and quickest way to get to te top of Mweelrea, but it's mostly just a bog walk. I did it in just under 3 hours. You can park where the track leaves the road, or add in the road walk and park at the beach at the end of the road. The track to open land is marked with a cul de sac sign and there are no fences once you get through the gate. Care should be taken on the upper section of the walk and should not be attempted in high winds or when the cloud base comes in due to cliffs near the summit.
  3. ^ a b c Paul Phelan (2011). Connemara & Mayo - A Walking Guide: Mountain, Coastal & Island Walks. Collins Press. ISBN 978-1848891029. Walk 27: Mweelrea
  4. ^ Paul Tempan (February 2012). "Irish Hill and Mountain Names" (PDF). MountainViews.ie.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Fairbairn, Helen (2014). Ireland's Best Walks: A Walking Guide. Collins Press. ISBN 978-1848892118. Route 29: Mweelrea
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Dillion, Paddy (1993). The Mountains of Ireland: A Guide to Walking the Summits. Cicerone. ISBN 978-1852841102. "Walk 53: Mweelrea, Ben Bury, Ben Lugmore
  7. ^ Michael Guilfoyle (6 April 2016). "A Walk for the Weekend: the magic of Mweelrea". Irish Times. My favourite mountain in the world is Mweelrea. From its summit, 16 years ago, I watched the last light of the millennium sink into a hushed Atlantic.
  8. ^ a b c d e Mountainviews, (September 2013), "A Guide to Ireland's Mountain Summits: The Vandeleur-Lynams & the Arderins", Collins Books, Cork, ISBN 978-1-84889-164-7
  9. ^ Simon Stewart (October 2018). "Arderins: Irish mountains of 500+m with a prominence of 30m". MountainViews Online Database.
  10. ^ Simon Stewart (October 2018). "Vandeleur-Lynams: Irish mountains of 600+m with a prominence of 15m". MountainViews Online Database.
  11. ^ David M. Williams (April 1984). "The stratigraphy and sedimentology of the Ordovician Partry Group, southeastern Murrisk, Ireland". Geological Journal. 9 (2): 173–186. doi:10.1002/gj.3350190206.
  12. ^ David M. Williams (1984). The geology around Killary harbour, Co. Galway : Field Series No. 3 (PDF). The Irish Geological Association.
  13. ^ "Gleann Choinnile: Glenconnelly". Irish Placenames Database. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  14. ^ "Irish Highest 100: The highest 100 Irish mountains with a prominence of +100m". MountainViews Online Database. September 2018.
  15. ^ "Interview: Nikki Bradley on her Upcoming Four Peaks Challenge". Outsider Magazine. 9 July 2018.
  16. ^ "Mweelrea/Ben Bury Scrambles". Irish Climbing Wiki. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  17. ^ "Winter climbing Connemara/South Mayo group". Irish Climbing Wiki. Retrieved 18 August 2019.

External links edit

  • MountainViews: The Irish Mountain Website, Mweelrea
  • MountainViews: Irish Online Mountain Database
  • The Database of British and Irish Hills , the largest database of British Isles mountains ("DoBIH")
  • Hill Bagging UK & Ireland, the searchable interface for the DoBIH

mweelrea, from, irish, cnoc, maol, réidh, bald, hill, with, smooth, mountain, atlantic, coast, county, mayo, ireland, rising, metres, highest, mountain, western, province, connacht, noted, southeastern, cliff, lined, corries, views, overlooks, killary, harbour. Mweelrea m w iː l ˈ r eɪ from Irish Cnoc Maol Reidh bald hill with the smooth top 4 is a mountain on the Atlantic coast of County Mayo Ireland Rising to 814 metres 2 671 ft it is the highest mountain in the western province of Connacht and is noted for its southeastern cliff lined corries 5 6 and its views 7 Mweelrea overlooks Killary Harbour and is at the heart of a horseshoe shaped massif that includes the peaks of Ben Lugmore and Ben Bury 8 5 The massif is called the Mweelrea Mountains or the Mweelrea Range 3 6 MweelreaCnoc Maol ReidhMweelrea and the corrie lake of Lough Bellawaum viewed from Ben Lugmore in the eastHighest pointElevation814 m 2 671 ft 1 Prominence779 m 2 556 ft 1 ListingCounty top Mayo P600 100 Highest Irish Mountains Marilyn Hewitt Arderin Simm Vandeleur LynamCoordinates53 38 14 N 9 49 49 W 53 63724 N 9 830358 W 53 63724 9 830358NamingEnglish translationsmooth bald hillLanguage of nameIrishPronunciation m w iː l ˈ r eɪ GeographyMweelreaLocation of Mweelrea in IrelandLocationCounty Mayo IrelandParent rangeMweelrea MountainsOSI OSNI gridL7898366810Topo mapOSi Discovery 37GeologyMountain typeSandstone amp conglomerate ignimbrite bedrock 1 ClimbingEasiest route Silver Strand 2 Normal route The Ramp Lug More corrie 3 Mweelrea is also the 26th highest peak in Ireland on the Arderin list 9 and the 34th highest on the Vandeleur Lynam list 10 8 Contents 1 Geology 2 Geography 3 Recreation 3 1 Hill walking 3 2 Rock climbing 3 3 Winter climbing 4 Gallery 5 Bibliography 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksGeology editThe geology of what is known as the Mweelrea Formation is very different from that of the Twelve Bens on the other side of Killary Harbour At a summary level the Mweelrea Formation consists of Ordovician period sandstones originally deposited on large alluvial fans and distally equivalent alluvial plains and delta fans Interbedded with these sandstones are tufts being ash deposits from Ordovician period volcanos 11 12 Geography editMweelrea and its subsidiary peaks form the southern half of the horseshoe shaped massif of the Mweelrea Mountains which are bounded by Killary Harbour Ireland s deepest fjord to the south and Doo Lough to the north 5 6 The valley in the centre of this horseshoe is the townsland of Glenconnelly Irish Gleann Choinnile 13 Two deep corries lie at the head of the Glenconnelly valley below Mweelrea s southeast face the southerly corrie contains Lough Lugaloughan while the northerly corrie contains Lough Bellawaum both are drained by the Sruhaunbunatrench River which empties into the Bundorragha River which itself flows into Killary Harbour 6 Mweelrea at 814 metres 2 671 ft is the highest mountain in massif and is the provincial top for Connacht 5 6 Mweelrea s prominence of 779 metres 2 556 ft qualifies it as a Marilyn and it also ranks it as the 16th highest mountain in Ireland on the MountainViews Online Database 100 Highest Irish Mountains where the minimum prominence threshold is 100 metres 8 14 Northeast of Mweelrea is Ben Bury or Irish Ucht an Chreagain meaning breast of the little crag it is also known as Oughty Craggy at 795 metres 2 608 ft and whose prominence of 60 metres 200 ft qualifies it as a Vandeleur Lynam it is the 43rd highest Vandeleur Lynam in Ireland 8 6 Further east around the horseshoe lies the long high summit ridge of Ben Lugmore and its subsidiary peaks that is only slightly lower than Mweelrea at 803 metres 2 635 ft and its northeast face forms the headwall of the cliff lined Lug More Irish Coum Dubh corrie 5 6 Southwest of Mweelrea is the southern arm of the horseshoe which is both lower and less sustained than the northern side It includes the Mweelrea SE Spur at 495 metres 1 624 ft sometimes called point 495 in guidebooks and finishes with the isolated Teevnabinnia Irish Taobh na Binne meaning side of the peak whose height is only 379 metres 1 243 ft but whose prominence of 214 metres 702 ft qualifies it as a Marilyn 8 6 West of Mweelrea lie the County Mayo beaches of Uggool Beach and Silver Strand Recreation editHill walking edit As the highest mountain in Connacht Mweelrea is climbed in Four Peaks Challenge formats being the highest mountains in the four provinces of Ireland 15 The fastest and most straightforward way to summit Mweelrea is via the 8 kilometre 3 hour Silver Strand Route 2 A longer route is the 13 kilometre 6 hour round trip via the Lug More or Irish Coum Dubh corrie and the valley of Glen Glencullin that take in the summits of Ben Bury and Ben Lugmore A notable feature known as The Ramp is used which crosses the headwall of this corrie at mid way from east to west in an upward slope reaching the ridge of Ben Lugmore at a col with Ben Bury While this route is direct caution is advised in properly finding The Ramp as the corrie has extensive cliffs 3 Mweelrea is also climbed as part of the 15 kilometre 6 7 hour Mweelrea Horseshoe which is described by a notable Irish guidebook as one of the top three in Ireland 5 The circuit starts and ends at the Delphi Mountain Resort and takes in all the peaks of the massif of Mweelrea including Ben Lugmore and its subsidiary peaks Ben Bury Mweelrea and the Mweelrea SE Spur or point 495 metres 5 6 Rock climbing edit While the main rock climbing on the Mweelrea massif is on the northeastern slopes of Ben Lugmore see here there are long Grade 1 and 2 scrambles on the northeastern slopes of Mweelrea Ben Bury 16 Winter climbing edit The Lough Bellawaum corrie Mweelrea s northeastern corrie also has a number of winter climbs the most notable of which are Blue Route Grade II III 270 m and Red Route Grade III 305 m 17 Gallery edit nbsp Mweelrea back left and Ben Lugmore centre viewed from the east on the summit of Ben Gorm nbsp Mweelrea and the corrie lake of Lough Bellawaum as viewed from Ben Lugmore nbsp Mweelrea massif as viewed from Leenaun Hill with Mweelrea back left Ben Lugmore back right and Teevnabinnia centre front nbsp Mweelrea viewed from the south in Renvyle nbsp Mweelrea eastern summit ridge as viewed from Ben BuryBibliography editFairbairn Helen 2014 Ireland s Best Walks A Walking Guide Collins Press ISBN 978 1848892118 MountainViews Online Database Simon Stewart 2013 A Guide to Ireland s Mountain Summits The Vandeleur Lynams amp the Arderins Collins Books ISBN 978 1 84889 164 7 Paul Phelan 2011 Connemara amp Mayo A Walking Guide Mountain Coastal amp Island Walks Collins Press ISBN 978 1848891029 lt ref gt Dillion Paddy 2001 Connemara Collins Rambler s guide Harper Collins ISBN 978 0002201216 Dillion Paddy 1993 The Mountains of Ireland A Guide to Walking the Summits Cicerone ISBN 978 1852841102 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mweelrea Mountains Maumturks major range in Connemara Twelve Bens major range in Connemara List of Irish counties by highest point Lists of mountains in Ireland Lists of mountains and hills in the British Isles List of P600 mountains in the British Isles List of Marilyns in the British Isles List of Hewitt mountains in England Wales and IrelandReferences edit a b c Mweelrea MountainViews Online Database Retrieved 16 August 2019 a b Mweelrea Silver Strand Route Start at L76288 68802 Mountainview ie This is the easiest and quickest way to get to te top of Mweelrea but it s mostly just a bog walk I did it in just under 3 hours You can park where the track leaves the road or add in the road walk and park at the beach at the end of the road The track to open land is marked with a cul de sac sign and there are no fences once you get through the gate Care should be taken on the upper section of the walk and should not be attempted in high winds or when the cloud base comes in due to cliffs near the summit a b c Paul Phelan 2011 Connemara amp Mayo A Walking Guide Mountain Coastal amp Island Walks Collins Press ISBN 978 1848891029 Walk 27 Mweelrea Paul Tempan February 2012 Irish Hill and Mountain Names PDF MountainViews ie a b c d e f g Fairbairn Helen 2014 Ireland s Best Walks A Walking Guide Collins Press ISBN 978 1848892118 Route 29 Mweelrea a b c d e f g h i Dillion Paddy 1993 The Mountains of Ireland A Guide to Walking the Summits Cicerone ISBN 978 1852841102 Walk 53 Mweelrea Ben Bury Ben Lugmore Michael Guilfoyle 6 April 2016 A Walk for the Weekend the magic of Mweelrea Irish Times My favourite mountain in the world is Mweelrea From its summit 16 years ago I watched the last light of the millennium sink into a hushed Atlantic a b c d e Mountainviews September 2013 A Guide to Ireland s Mountain Summits The Vandeleur Lynams amp the Arderins Collins Books Cork ISBN 978 1 84889 164 7 Simon Stewart October 2018 Arderins Irish mountains of 500 m with a prominence of 30m MountainViews Online Database Simon Stewart October 2018 Vandeleur Lynams Irish mountains of 600 m with a prominence of 15m MountainViews Online Database David M Williams April 1984 The stratigraphy and sedimentology of the Ordovician Partry Group southeastern Murrisk Ireland Geological Journal 9 2 173 186 doi 10 1002 gj 3350190206 David M Williams 1984 The geology around Killary harbour Co Galway Field Series No 3 PDF The Irish Geological Association Gleann Choinnile Glenconnelly Irish Placenames Database Retrieved 19 August 2019 Irish Highest 100 The highest 100 Irish mountains with a prominence of 100m MountainViews Online Database September 2018 Interview Nikki Bradley on her Upcoming Four Peaks Challenge Outsider Magazine 9 July 2018 Mweelrea Ben Bury Scrambles Irish Climbing Wiki Retrieved 20 August 2019 Winter climbing Connemara South Mayo group Irish Climbing Wiki Retrieved 18 August 2019 External links editMountainViews The Irish Mountain Website Mweelrea MountainViews Irish Online Mountain Database The Database of British and Irish Hills the largest database of British Isles mountains DoBIH Hill Bagging UK amp Ireland the searchable interface for the DoBIH Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mweelrea amp oldid 1158174901 Geography, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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