Hills of Britain and Ireland
Scotland : Midlothian
C | County | Area | Id. | Name | Feet | Metres | Drop | Relative | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
S | Edinburgh/Midlothian | 1816 | Allermuir Hill | 1617 | 493 | 236 | Marilyn | ||
S | Midlothian | 1815 | Black Hill | 1644 | 501 | 184 | Marilyn | ||
S | Midlothian | 5081 | Carnethy Hill | 1880 | 573 | 128 | Hump | ||
S | Midlothian | 1807 | Scald Law | 1900 | 579 | 312 | Marilyn | ||
S | Midlothian/Scottish Borders | Moorfoot Hills | 1803 | Bowbeat Hill | 2054 | 626 | 79 | ||
S | Midlothian/Scottish Borders | Moorfoot Hills | 1802 | Blackhope Scar | 2138 | 652 | 283 | Marilyn |
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.