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Loch Katrine

Loch Katrine (listen; Scottish Gaelic: Loch Ceiteirein [l̪ˠɔx ˈkʲʰeʰtʲɪɾʲɛɲ] or Loch Ceathairne) is a freshwater loch in the Trossachs area of the Scottish Highlands, east of Loch Lomond, within the historic county and registration county of Perthshire and the contemporary district of Stirling. The loch is about 8 miles (13 km) long and 1 mile (1.6 km) wide at its widest point, and runs the length of Strath Gartney (Gaelic: Srath Ghartain). It is within the drainage basins of the River Teith and River Forth.

Loch Katrine
Loch Ceiteirein
Above Stronachlachar, looking eastward along the length of the loch
Loch Katrine
Loch Ceiteirein
LocationStirling area, Scotland
Coordinates56°15′16″N 4°30′56″W / 56.25444°N 4.51556°W / 56.25444; -4.51556
Typefreshwater loch, reservoir
Primary outflowsAchray Water and Katrine aqueduct
Basin countriesScotland
Max. length13 km (8.1 mi)[1]
Max. width1 km (0.62 mi)
IslandsEllen's Isle, Black Isle, Factor's Isle or Island

It is a popular scenic attraction for tourists and day-visitors from Glasgow and nearby towns; fly and boat fishing for trout are permitted on the loch from spring to autumn. It also serves as a reservoir for the water supply of the Glasgow conurbation, some 30 miles (48 km) south, being connected by two aqueducts constructed in 1859.

It is the fictional setting of Sir Walter Scott's poem The Lady of the Lake and of the subsequent opera by Gioachino Rossini, La donna del lago.

Name etymology edit

William Watson, a renowned scholar of Scottish place names, judged Katrine to be "thoroughly Pictish" in origin, and to derive from an extension of the Celtic root *ceit, meaning "dark, gloomy place", a name referring to the loch's heavily forested shores.[2]

The name Katrine has also been hypothesized to represent cateran, from the Gaelic ceathairne, a collective word meaning cattle thief[3] or possibly peasantry.

Physical geography edit

 
1910 Bathymetric chart of Loch Katrine

Loch Katrine is a serpentine lake orientated west-north-west - east-south-east, having a length of about 8 miles (13 km), with a maximum width of almost exactly 1 mile (1.6 km) between the mouths of the Letter burn and the Strone burn on the northern shore to a small bay on the opposite shore. The mean breadth, obtained by dividing the area of the loch by its length, is 0.6 miles (0.97 km) being 7.5% of the length.[4]

The waters of the loch cover an area of 3,059 acres (1,238 ha), and it drains a mountainous area, some eight times greater, of about 24,900 acres (10,100 ha). It contains an estimated 27,274,000,000 cubic feet (772,300,000 m3) of water with a mean depth of 99 feet (30 m), being over 40% of the maximum observed depth of 495 feet (151 m).[4]

The surface of the loch is 364 feet (111 m) above sea-level, and so some 645 acres (261 ha) of its bottom lies below sea-level, the deepest part being 131 feet (40 m) below sea-level. In this respect Loch Katrine differs from the other lakes in the Forth Basin, none of which has depth sufficient to bring any portion of their bottoms below the level of the sea.[4]

Loch Katrine forms a single basin, not being divided, like Loch Lomond and Loch Lubnaig, for instance, into separate basins by any important ridges or rises on the bottom. The deepest part is in the centre of the loch, a long narrow depression, with depths exceeding 400 feet (120 m), extending for over 4 miles (6.4 km) from opposite Coilachra to opposite Huinn Dubh-aird, with a maximum width of over one-quarter of a mile (0.40 km); this 400-feet depression has an area of about 515 acres (208 ha), or 17% of the entire superficial area of the loch. The deepest sounding is situated at the very eastern extremity of the 400-feet depression.[4]

The 300 feet (91 m) depression is over 5 miles (8 km) in length, with a maximum breadth of one-third of a mile (0.54 km); it extends from off Coilachra to near Ellen's Isle. The area enclosed between the 300-feet and 400-feet contour lines is about 415 acres (168 ha), or 13% of the entire area of the loch.[4]

The 200 feet (61 m) depression is five and a half miles (8.9 km) in length and one-half a mile (0.80 km) in maximum breadth, extending from south of Ellen's Isle to near Black Island, where it is separated (by a sounding of 198 feet (60 m)) from a small isolated area, lying between Coilachra and Black Island, one-third of a mile (0.54 km) in length by nearly one-eighth of a mile (0.20 km) broad. The area between the 200- and 300-feet contours is about 510 acres (210 ha), or 17% of the area of the loch.[4]

There are two 100 feet (30 m) depressions, the principal one (6 miles (10 km) long) stretching from close to Ellen's Isle to Black Island, the other extending from Black Island towards the point called Rudha nam Moine, with a total length of over one-half a mile (0.80 km). The area enclosed between the 100- and 200-feet contours is about 670 acres (270 ha), or 22% of the area of the loch.[4]

The 50 feet (15 m)-feet line follows pretty closely the contour of the loch, from Rudha nam Moine into the eastern arms of the loch at the Trossachs, running outside of Black island, Ellen's isle, and the small islands near the shore all round, with a small isolated patch at the junction of the Trossachs arm with the arm leading to Achray Water; it encloses a small shallow, with a beacon on it, opposite the entrance of the Glasahoile. The area between the 50- and 100-feet contours is about 400 acres (160 ha), or 13% of the area of the loch, while the area between the coast-line and the 50-feet contour is nearly 550 acres (220 ha), or 18% of the loch area; so that 82% of the floor of the loch is covered by over 50 feet (15 m) of water.[4]

Geology edit

 
Loch Katrine by Alexander Nasmyth, 1810

For a distance of 4 miles west from Brenachoil Lodge to Stronachlachar — about the half of the total length of the loch — Loch Katrine has a comparatively flat bottom, enclosed by the 400-feet contour line. The deepest sounding in Loch Katrine, 495 feet, is at the eastern limit of this basin, nearly due south of Brenachoil. Bathymetric charts show that the soundings throughout this basin gradually increase in depth eastwards to Brenachoil Lodge. The position of the deepest sounding is of interest, seeing that the strata which form the floor of the lake at this point consist of schistose micaceous grits, to the north-west of the epidotic grits ("Green Beds") and Ben Ledi grits, the two latter groups having formed the great rocky barrier at and above the outlet of the lake.[5]

Near the upper end of the loch a rocky barrier crosses the lake from Portnellan by the Black Island to Budha Maoil Mhir an-t Salainn. The deepest sounding along this barrier is 90 feet (27 m), and the shallowest is 48 feet (15 m). On its lower side the 100 feet (30 m) contour line almost crosses the lake. Above it there is another basin over half a mile in length, the greatest depth of which is 128 feet (39 m), immediately in front of the rocky ridge just referred to. Westwards the lake shallows, and at its head it has been silted up for a distance of half a mile by alluvium laid down by Glengyle Water.[5]

Below Brenachoil Lodge the soundings show an uneven floor, due probably to ridges of rock rather than to morainic deposits, judged from the geological features on both sides of the lake. Ellen's Isle is composed of epidotic grits ("Green Beds"), and the promontories of Am Priosan partly of "Green Beds" and partly of Ben Ledi grits. The promontory between the pier and the sluice is formed of Ben Ledi grits.[5]

Several small faults cross Loch Katrine, but these are of minor importance, and have produced locally a slight brecciation of the strata. It is a typical example of a rock basin. The deepest sounding occurs in the front of the great rocky barrier in the lower part of the lake, in accordance with a theory of glacial erosion.[5]

Settlements edit

 
Stronachlachar from Loch Katrine with Factor's Isle in the foreground.

The main access points for Loch Katrine are either via Trossachs Pier at the loch's eastern end or Stronachlachar (Gaelic Sròn a' Chlachair "the headland of the stonemason") towards the western end of the loch. Trossachs Pier essentially consists of a parking space, pier, gift shop and cafe (Katrine Cafe) which are open from the first to the last sailing of the cruise boats, (normally 6pm).[6]

On the northern shore are the Brenchoile hunting lodge and the farms Letter (Gaelic: Leitir), Edra (Gaelic: Eatarra "between them"), Strone (Gaelic: An t-Sròn "the nose"), Coilachra, Portnellan (Gaelic: Port an Eilein "port of the island") and Glengyle (Gaelic: Gleann Goill "glen of a lowlander"), on the southern are The Dhu (Gaelic: An Dubh "the black") at the western end of the loch, Stronachlachar, the Royal Cottage, Culligart and Glasahoile (Gaelic: Glas-choille "greywood"). The roads and paths do not circle the loch completely, as the southern road stops at Glasahoile.[7]

Islands edit

There are several small islands in Loch Katrine such as Ellen's Isle (Gaelic: An t-Eilean Molach "the shingly isle"), the Black Isle[7] and Factor's Island (Gaelic: Eilean a' Bhàillidh).

History edit

 
Plaque commemorating the Glen Finglas expansion of Loch Katrine waterworks, completed in 1958
 
Scenery of Loch Katrine in 1844 by Henry Fox Talbot[8]

Loch Katrine is now owned by Scottish Water, and has been the primary water reservoir for much of the city of Glasgow and its surrounding areas since 1859.[9] The water level has been artificially raised by around 1.8 metres (5.9 ft) - the loch can be drawn down by a maximum of 2 metres (6.6 ft). The water drawn down provides gravitational flow, using the Katrine aqueduct,[10] to the Milngavie water treatment works via two 41-kilometre (25 mi) long aqueducts and 21 kilometres (13 mi) of tunnel. Old photos showing the building of the aqueducts were discovered in a skip in Possilpark in 2018.[11]

Milngavie itself is almost 122 metres (400 ft) above sea level: sufficient to provide adequate water pressure to the majority of the town without the need for pumping. The system can deliver up to 230,000,000 litres (51,000,000 imp gal) a day. Construction was started in 1855 and the works was opened by Queen Victoria in 1859. The aqueduct was built under the guidance of the eminent civil engineer John Frederick Bateman (1810–1889). The second aqueduct was opened in 1901.[12]

 
The Boat Pier, ca. 1870, photographed by George Washington Wilson

Water levels are supplemented via a dam and short tunnel from Loch Arklet, a reservoir located between Loch Katrine and Loch Lomond, beside the road to Inversnaid; this project was completed in 1914. A longer tunnel beneath Ben A'an which brings water from the Glen Finglas Reservoir was completed in 1958, and the dam was completed in 1965.[12]

Oil-fired vessels are not permitted to sail its waters due to the danger of pollution to the drinking water of Glasgow. The steamboat SS Sir Walter Scott has provided sailings on the loch since 1900. It was coal-fired until 2007, when it was converted to use bio-diesel fuel, and continues to provide local tourist transport between Trossachs Pier and Stronachlachar during the summer.[13]

The loch is the subject of The Athole Highlanders' Farewell to Loch Katrine.

Trivia edit

 
The view of Cruinn Bheinn, with Beinn Mheadhonach and Meall Gaothach to the right, on the northern shore of Loch Katrine.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "LOCH KATRINE". Visit Scotland. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  2. ^ Watson, William J (1910). The Celtic Review.
  3. ^ "BBC 2, Britain's Lost Routes. Griff Rhys Jones, Documentary about Highland Cattle Drovers". Bbc.co.uk. 28 October 2012. Retrieved 28 December 2013.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h John, Murray; Lawrence, Pullar (1910). Bathymetrical Survey of the Fresh-Water Lochs of Scotland, 1897-1909 Lochs of the Forth Basin Volume II - Loch Katrine. Edinburgh: Challenger Office. pp. 1–5.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  5. ^ a b c d Peach, Ben; Horne, John (1910). "Notes on the Geology of the Loch Katrine District". Bathymetrical Survey of the Fresh-Water Lochs of Scotland, 1897-1909 Lochs of the Forth Basin Volume II. Edinburgh: Challenger Office. pp. 48–49.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  6. ^ "The Loch Katrine Experience". Lochkatrine.com. 14 June 2012. Retrieved 28 December 2013.
  7. ^ a b Ordnance Survey, 1:25,000 map
  8. ^ "Fox Talbot's 1844 photograph of Loch Katrine". Birmingham Museum of Art. Retrieved 30 September 2013.
  9. ^ Herschy, Reginald W. (2012). "Loch Katrine". Encyclopedia of Lakes and Reservoirs. Encyclopedia of Earth Sciences Series: 495–499. doi:10.1007/978-1-4020-4410-6_121. ISBN 978-1-4020-5616-1. Retrieved 28 May 2021.
  10. ^ "Old photos show Katrine aqueduct being built". BBC News. 28 February 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2020.
  11. ^ "Old photos show Katrine aqueduct being built". BBC News. 28 February 2019. Retrieved 23 October 2021.
  12. ^ a b . Engineering Timelines. Archived from the original on 14 June 2021. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
  13. ^ Devine, Cate (23 April 2009). "SS Sir Walter Scott returns to Loch Katrine". The Herald.

loch, katrine, wilderness, lake, united, states, washington, listen, scottish, gaelic, loch, ceiteirein, ˠɔx, ˈkʲʰeʰtʲɪɾʲɛɲ, loch, ceathairne, freshwater, loch, trossachs, area, scottish, highlands, east, loch, lomond, within, historic, county, registration, c. For the wilderness lake in the United States see Loch Katrine Washington Loch Katrine listen Scottish Gaelic Loch Ceiteirein l ˠɔx ˈkʲʰeʰtʲɪɾʲɛɲ or Loch Ceathairne is a freshwater loch in the Trossachs area of the Scottish Highlands east of Loch Lomond within the historic county and registration county of Perthshire and the contemporary district of Stirling The loch is about 8 miles 13 km long and 1 mile 1 6 km wide at its widest point and runs the length of Strath Gartney Gaelic Srath Ghartain It is within the drainage basins of the River Teith and River Forth Loch KatrineLoch CeiteireinAbove Stronachlachar looking eastward along the length of the lochLoch KatrineLoch CeiteireinLocationStirling area ScotlandCoordinates56 15 16 N 4 30 56 W 56 25444 N 4 51556 W 56 25444 4 51556Typefreshwater loch reservoirPrimary outflowsAchray Water and Katrine aqueductBasin countriesScotlandMax length13 km 8 1 mi 1 Max width1 km 0 62 mi IslandsEllen s Isle Black Isle Factor s Isle or Island It is a popular scenic attraction for tourists and day visitors from Glasgow and nearby towns fly and boat fishing for trout are permitted on the loch from spring to autumn It also serves as a reservoir for the water supply of the Glasgow conurbation some 30 miles 48 km south being connected by two aqueducts constructed in 1859 It is the fictional setting of Sir Walter Scott s poem The Lady of the Lake and of the subsequent opera by Gioachino Rossini La donna del lago Contents 1 Name etymology 2 Physical geography 2 1 Geology 2 2 Settlements 2 3 Islands 3 History 4 Trivia 5 See also 6 ReferencesName etymology editWilliam Watson a renowned scholar of Scottish place names judged Katrine to be thoroughly Pictish in origin and to derive from an extension of the Celtic root ceit meaning dark gloomy place a name referring to the loch s heavily forested shores 2 The name Katrine has also been hypothesized to represent cateran from the Gaelic ceathairne a collective word meaning cattle thief 3 or possibly peasantry Physical geography edit nbsp 1910 Bathymetric chart of Loch Katrine Loch Katrine is a serpentine lake orientated west north west east south east having a length of about 8 miles 13 km with a maximum width of almost exactly 1 mile 1 6 km between the mouths of the Letter burn and the Strone burn on the northern shore to a small bay on the opposite shore The mean breadth obtained by dividing the area of the loch by its length is 0 6 miles 0 97 km being 7 5 of the length 4 The waters of the loch cover an area of 3 059 acres 1 238 ha and it drains a mountainous area some eight times greater of about 24 900 acres 10 100 ha It contains an estimated 27 274 000 000 cubic feet 772 300 000 m3 of water with a mean depth of 99 feet 30 m being over 40 of the maximum observed depth of 495 feet 151 m 4 The surface of the loch is 364 feet 111 m above sea level and so some 645 acres 261 ha of its bottom lies below sea level the deepest part being 131 feet 40 m below sea level In this respect Loch Katrine differs from the other lakes in the Forth Basin none of which has depth sufficient to bring any portion of their bottoms below the level of the sea 4 Loch Katrine forms a single basin not being divided like Loch Lomond and Loch Lubnaig for instance into separate basins by any important ridges or rises on the bottom The deepest part is in the centre of the loch a long narrow depression with depths exceeding 400 feet 120 m extending for over 4 miles 6 4 km from opposite Coilachra to opposite Huinn Dubh aird with a maximum width of over one quarter of a mile 0 40 km this 400 feet depression has an area of about 515 acres 208 ha or 17 of the entire superficial area of the loch The deepest sounding is situated at the very eastern extremity of the 400 feet depression 4 The 300 feet 91 m depression is over 5 miles 8 km in length with a maximum breadth of one third of a mile 0 54 km it extends from off Coilachra to near Ellen s Isle The area enclosed between the 300 feet and 400 feet contour lines is about 415 acres 168 ha or 13 of the entire area of the loch 4 The 200 feet 61 m depression is five and a half miles 8 9 km in length and one half a mile 0 80 km in maximum breadth extending from south of Ellen s Isle to near Black Island where it is separated by a sounding of 198 feet 60 m from a small isolated area lying between Coilachra and Black Island one third of a mile 0 54 km in length by nearly one eighth of a mile 0 20 km broad The area between the 200 and 300 feet contours is about 510 acres 210 ha or 17 of the area of the loch 4 There are two 100 feet 30 m depressions the principal one 6 miles 10 km long stretching from close to Ellen s Isle to Black Island the other extending from Black Island towards the point called Rudha nam Moine with a total length of over one half a mile 0 80 km The area enclosed between the 100 and 200 feet contours is about 670 acres 270 ha or 22 of the area of the loch 4 The 50 feet 15 m feet line follows pretty closely the contour of the loch from Rudha nam Moine into the eastern arms of the loch at the Trossachs running outside of Black island Ellen s isle and the small islands near the shore all round with a small isolated patch at the junction of the Trossachs arm with the arm leading to Achray Water it encloses a small shallow with a beacon on it opposite the entrance of the Glasahoile The area between the 50 and 100 feet contours is about 400 acres 160 ha or 13 of the area of the loch while the area between the coast line and the 50 feet contour is nearly 550 acres 220 ha or 18 of the loch area so that 82 of the floor of the loch is covered by over 50 feet 15 m of water 4 Geology edit nbsp Loch Katrine by Alexander Nasmyth 1810 For a distance of 4 miles west from Brenachoil Lodge to Stronachlachar about the half of the total length of the loch Loch Katrine has a comparatively flat bottom enclosed by the 400 feet contour line The deepest sounding in Loch Katrine 495 feet is at the eastern limit of this basin nearly due south of Brenachoil Bathymetric charts show that the soundings throughout this basin gradually increase in depth eastwards to Brenachoil Lodge The position of the deepest sounding is of interest seeing that the strata which form the floor of the lake at this point consist of schistose micaceous grits to the north west of the epidotic grits Green Beds and Ben Ledi grits the two latter groups having formed the great rocky barrier at and above the outlet of the lake 5 Near the upper end of the loch a rocky barrier crosses the lake from Portnellan by the Black Island to Budha Maoil Mhir an t Salainn The deepest sounding along this barrier is 90 feet 27 m and the shallowest is 48 feet 15 m On its lower side the 100 feet 30 m contour line almost crosses the lake Above it there is another basin over half a mile in length the greatest depth of which is 128 feet 39 m immediately in front of the rocky ridge just referred to Westwards the lake shallows and at its head it has been silted up for a distance of half a mile by alluvium laid down by Glengyle Water 5 Below Brenachoil Lodge the soundings show an uneven floor due probably to ridges of rock rather than to morainic deposits judged from the geological features on both sides of the lake Ellen s Isle is composed of epidotic grits Green Beds and the promontories of Am Priosan partly of Green Beds and partly of Ben Ledi grits The promontory between the pier and the sluice is formed of Ben Ledi grits 5 Several small faults cross Loch Katrine but these are of minor importance and have produced locally a slight brecciation of the strata It is a typical example of a rock basin The deepest sounding occurs in the front of the great rocky barrier in the lower part of the lake in accordance with a theory of glacial erosion 5 Settlements edit nbsp Stronachlachar from Loch Katrine with Factor s Isle in the foreground The main access points for Loch Katrine are either via Trossachs Pier at the loch s eastern end or Stronachlachar Gaelic Sron a Chlachair the headland of the stonemason towards the western end of the loch Trossachs Pier essentially consists of a parking space pier gift shop and cafe Katrine Cafe which are open from the first to the last sailing of the cruise boats normally 6pm 6 On the northern shore are the Brenchoile hunting lodge and the farms Letter Gaelic Leitir Edra Gaelic Eatarra between them Strone Gaelic An t Sron the nose Coilachra Portnellan Gaelic Port an Eilein port of the island and Glengyle Gaelic Gleann Goill glen of a lowlander on the southern are The Dhu Gaelic An Dubh the black at the western end of the loch Stronachlachar the Royal Cottage Culligart and Glasahoile Gaelic Glas choille greywood The roads and paths do not circle the loch completely as the southern road stops at Glasahoile 7 Islands edit There are several small islands in Loch Katrine such as Ellen s Isle Gaelic An t Eilean Molach the shingly isle the Black Isle 7 and Factor s Island Gaelic Eilean a Bhaillidh History edit nbsp Plaque commemorating the Glen Finglas expansion of Loch Katrine waterworks completed in 1958 nbsp Scenery of Loch Katrine in 1844 by Henry Fox Talbot 8 Loch Katrine is now owned by Scottish Water and has been the primary water reservoir for much of the city of Glasgow and its surrounding areas since 1859 9 The water level has been artificially raised by around 1 8 metres 5 9 ft the loch can be drawn down by a maximum of 2 metres 6 6 ft The water drawn down provides gravitational flow using the Katrine aqueduct 10 to the Milngavie water treatment works via two 41 kilometre 25 mi long aqueducts and 21 kilometres 13 mi of tunnel Old photos showing the building of the aqueducts were discovered in a skip in Possilpark in 2018 11 Milngavie itself is almost 122 metres 400 ft above sea level sufficient to provide adequate water pressure to the majority of the town without the need for pumping The system can deliver up to 230 000 000 litres 51 000 000 imp gal a day Construction was started in 1855 and the works was opened by Queen Victoria in 1859 The aqueduct was built under the guidance of the eminent civil engineer John Frederick Bateman 1810 1889 The second aqueduct was opened in 1901 12 nbsp The Boat Pier ca 1870 photographed by George Washington Wilson Water levels are supplemented via a dam and short tunnel from Loch Arklet a reservoir located between Loch Katrine and Loch Lomond beside the road to Inversnaid this project was completed in 1914 A longer tunnel beneath Ben A an which brings water from the Glen Finglas Reservoir was completed in 1958 and the dam was completed in 1965 12 Oil fired vessels are not permitted to sail its waters due to the danger of pollution to the drinking water of Glasgow The steamboat SS Sir Walter Scott has provided sailings on the loch since 1900 It was coal fired until 2007 when it was converted to use bio diesel fuel and continues to provide local tourist transport between Trossachs Pier and Stronachlachar during the summer 13 The loch is the subject of The Athole Highlanders Farewell to Loch Katrine Trivia edit nbsp The view of Cruinn Bheinn with Beinn Mheadhonach and Meall Gaothach to the right on the northern shore of Loch Katrine Loch Katrine is also the name of a lake in North Canterbury New Zealand Rob Roy MacGregor was born at the head of the loch See also editList of dams and reservoirs in the United KingdomReferences edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Loch Katrine LOCH KATRINE Visit Scotland Retrieved 4 October 2016 Watson William J 1910 The Celtic Review BBC 2 Britain s Lost Routes Griff Rhys Jones Documentary about Highland Cattle Drovers Bbc co uk 28 October 2012 Retrieved 28 December 2013 a b c d e f g h John Murray Lawrence Pullar 1910 Bathymetrical Survey of the Fresh Water Lochs of Scotland 1897 1909 Lochs of the Forth Basin Volume II Loch Katrine Edinburgh Challenger Office pp 1 5 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b c d Peach Ben Horne John 1910 Notes on the Geology of the Loch Katrine District Bathymetrical Survey of the Fresh Water Lochs of Scotland 1897 1909 Lochs of the Forth Basin Volume II Edinburgh Challenger Office pp 48 49 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain The Loch Katrine Experience Lochkatrine com 14 June 2012 Retrieved 28 December 2013 a b Ordnance Survey 1 25 000 map Fox Talbot s 1844 photograph of Loch Katrine Birmingham Museum of Art Retrieved 30 September 2013 Herschy Reginald W 2012 Loch Katrine Encyclopedia of Lakes and Reservoirs Encyclopedia of Earth Sciences Series 495 499 doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 4410 6 121 ISBN 978 1 4020 5616 1 Retrieved 28 May 2021 Old photos show Katrine aqueduct being built BBC News 28 February 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2020 Old photos show Katrine aqueduct being built BBC News 28 February 2019 Retrieved 23 October 2021 a b Loch Katrine and aqueducts Engineering Timelines Archived from the original on 14 June 2021 Retrieved 15 November 2022 Devine Cate 23 April 2009 SS Sir Walter Scott returns to Loch Katrine The Herald Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Loch Katrine amp oldid 1216023790 Settlements, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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