Moray Firth
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Reference no | 1002 |
---|---|
Designated as world heritage site | July 22, 1999 |
Locations | Scotland |
United Kingdom | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 1060001 |
About Moray Firth
The Moray Firth is a roughly triangular inlet of the North Sea, north and east of Inverness, which is in the Highland council area of north of Scotland.
All baa myself: Is this Britain's loneliest sheep?
... Jill Turner, from Brora, said she first came across the ewe while kayaking along the Moray Firth s east Highland coast...
ScotWind offshore auction raises £700m
... They include parts of the North Sea to the east of Angus, the outer Moray Firth, west of Orkney, east of Shetland and north-west of both Lewis and Islay...
Marine wildlife warning as UK whale sightings rise
... White-beaked dolphins were seen off Essex, far from their normal subarctic waters, while Moray Firth bottlenose dolphins were recorded on the south coast for the first time...
Archaeological digs in new locations at Culloden Battlefield
... The stone was torn from the ground as a huge ice sheet crept out of the west towards the Moray Firth coast...
A cluster of Islands such As the Shetland Islands blocked early, stopped the virus in its tracks
... An introduction by the Islands, a member of the Scottish Parliament banned public facilities from the production of cards, the representations of Shetland, for reasons of cartographic convenience, in a box in the Moray Firth or to the East of Orkney, instead of its true geographical location...
Meet the news stars of BBC Scotland's The Nine
... She began her career at Moray Firth Radio in Inverness before moving on to STV News North where she spent 11 years as a reporter and presenter...
Archaeological digs in new locations at Culloden Battlefield
Archaeologists hope to unearth new insights into The Battle of Culloden by digging in an area of The Battlefield not previously excavated.
The Battle saw the defeat of Bonnie Prince Charlie's Jacobite forces by The Duke of Cumberland's government army.
The Spot is near to where The Left wing of a second line of British government troops lined up on 16 April 1746.
Archaeologists hope to find personal items dropped or discarded by government soldiers.
Culloden was The Last pitched battle (where The Time and place was agreed beforehand) fought on British soil.
It saw the deaths of about 1,600 Men - 1,500 of them Jacobites.
As well as buttons, buckles and ammunition, The Team said they might also find lead shot fired by the Jacobites into the lines of government troops during the 40-minute battle.
A series of pits will be dug in the area close to the access road to The Battlefield 's visitor centre.
The Work for The National Trust for Scotland will also include using digital and drone photography to make 3D models of the Culloden monument, the gravestones of clansmen killed fighting for The Prince and other battlefield markers.
A 3D model is also to be created of an enormous boulder known as.
The government army's commander, The Duke of Cumberland, is said to have had breakfast, or his lunch, on the table-flat top of The Rock on The Day of The Battle . It has also been said that he stood on The Stone to better survey The Course of the fighting.
The boulder is a glacial feature known as an erratic, meaning it is of a rock type that is different from the bedrock on which it sits.
The Rock has been matched to the geology of Stratherrick, which lies almost 20 miles (32km) south of Inverness. The Stone was torn from the ground as a huge Ice Sheet crept out of The West towards the Moray Firth coast.
Culloden ended Prince Charles Edward Stuart's campaign to regain The Great British throne for his father.
The Prince escaped from The Battlefield , which is near Inverness, and died in Palazzo Muti, Rome, in 1788.
Archaeologists have examined the moorland battle site on The Outskirts of Inverness before.
In recent years, detailed investigations with metal detecting and geophysical survey work have taken place in an area known as The Field of the English, with trial trenching around Old Leanach Cottage, both close to The Position of the government first line.
The National Trust for Scotland manages The Battlefield .
Operations manager Raoul Curtis Machin said: " The Team are really excited about The Dig .
" They are passionate about the history of Culloden Battlefield and are always learning new things about this amazing site which we can then share with The Public who care so deeply about this important place. "
Source of news: bbc.com