Hills of Britain and Ireland
Northern Ireland : Antrim and Newtownabbey
C |
County |
Area |
Id. |
Name |
Feet |
Metres |
Drop |
Relative |
Notes |
I |
Antrim and Newtownabbey |
Belfast Hills |
21017 |
Carnmoney Hill |
758 |
231 |
108 |
Hump |
|
I |
Antrim and Newtownabbey |
Belfast Hills |
20468 |
Slievetrue |
1024 |
312 |
188 |
Marilyn |
|
I |
Antrim and Newtownabbey |
Antrim Hills |
20453 |
Carnearny |
1047 |
319 |
150 |
Marilyn |
|
I |
Antrim and Newtownabbey |
Belfast Hills |
21243 |
Divis (boundary) |
1493 |
455 |
0 |
|
|
Notes
- Data: Database of British and Irish Hills v18.0
- Relative height, drop, or prominence is the height difference between a hill's summit and the col (lowest point) connecting it to the next higher summit. "Marilyns" are hills with a relative height of 150 metres, and "Humps" have 100 metres. There are some even in the south east of England.
- We use OS mapping for England, Scotland, Wales, and the Isle of Man. Sadly, Channel Islands, Northern (OSNI) and Southern Ireland (OSI) mapping isn't available online, so we use Openstreetmap.