Dumyat

mountain in Stirling, Scotland, UK

DBpedia resource is: http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dumyat

Abstract is: Dumyat or Dunmyat /dəˈmaɪ.ɪt/ (Scottish Gaelic: Dùn Mhèad) is a hill at the western extremity of the Ochil Hills in central Scotland. The name is thought to originate from Dun (hill fort) of the Maeatae. Although relatively small (its height is 418 metres), the characteristic shape of the hill forms an important part of the distinctive scenery of the Stirling area, and it is often depicted (particularly in postcards and calendars) in combination with the nearby Abbey Craig. The hill is a popular climb with tourists and visitors to the Stirling and Trossachs area, due to the historical nature of Stirling and the proximity of the Wallace Monument. Dumyat has two principal summits: Castle Law on the west, and Dumyat proper on the east. On the summit of Castle Law the remains of an ancient hill fort, originally occupied by the Maeatae, are still clearly discernible. The fort is a scheduled monument. At one time the favourite route to the summit of either Dumyat or Castle Law was via the prominent gulley which runs almost straight up the southern scarp face, and continues down the gently sloping north face. This gulley was formed by the erosion of a fault, resulting from the juxtaposition of soft pyroclastic rocks on one side against harder andesite and basalt on the other. This has resulted in an area where hard andesite slightly overhangs, and is the darkest and least exposed part of the climb, which is not particularly difficult. Further gullies, formed by secondary tearing around the main fault (itself a product of the major disturbance which resulted from the Ochil Fault) extend to the right into Dumyat, and form potential shortcuts to the summit. The first of these, Raeburn's Gulley, is particularly dangerous and should only be attempted by experienced and properly equipped rock climbers, however the second, Siart Gulley, is climbable by anyone of average ability, if care is taken in scrambling up the steep step at the end. The third, fourth and fifth gullies are not named, and become progressively easier. Nowadays many people park their cars on Sheriffmuir and take a longer but more gently sloping path to the summit, passing behind, i.e. slightly to the north of, the summit of Castle Law. The third route is via Menstrie Glen from the east, and is a somewhat gentle ascent in the beginning, which steepens satisfactorily for those who like a decent climb, as the summit is approached. The exposed terrain of Dumyat and the surrounding muir are suitable only for sheep farming, with several sheep folds dotting the hill's sides, along with the ruins of a shepherd's stone house. Dumyat was formerly the site of small-scale mining for copper and barytes, although these workings are now abandoned. The scree on the scarp face of Castle Law is a source of agates, not necessarily of the finest quality, but occasionally other specimens such as smoky quartz and citrine can be found, along with the inevitable quartz, calcite, barytes, and two ores of copper, malachite, and less commonly, azurite. At the top is a memorial to the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, a memorial bench to Mr Michael Simpson (a long serving and much loved member of the Open University) a trig point, and a characteristic cairn with a beacon on top that is currently filled with stones.The stones which are placed in the beacon are all wishes that have been made by others.The beacon on the top of Dumyat was commissioned for the Queen's Silver Jubilee in 1977. It was carried up and erected by the Menstrie Scout Group and was part of the UK chain of beacons lit as part of the Jubilee celebrations.

Wikimedia Commons category is Dumyat


Coordinates:
(P625, lat/long)56.157688888 / -3.87725

Dumyat is …
instance of (P31):
mountainQ8502

External links are
P2581BabelNet ID02033330n
02033330n
P6515DoBIH Number1667
P646Freebase ID/m/07xdcl
P7350Gazetteer for Scotland place IDfeatures/featurefirst418
P9284GB1900 ID582a01c92c66dc680e004dd3
P1566GeoNames ID2650791
P2326GNS Unique Feature ID-2594820
P269IdRef ID146319095
P8189J9U ID987007561915005171
P11693OpenStreetMap node ID29345919
P613OS grid referenceNS8354297689
P3109Peakbagger mountain ID15573
P3120TOID4000000074603743
P214VIAF cluster ID159442228

P30continentEuropeQ46
P17countryUnited KingdomQ145
P2044elevation above sea level418
P7959historic countyStirlingQ217838
P131located in the administrative territorial entityClackmannanshireQ207268
P4552mountain rangeOchil HillsQ45828
P3137parent peakWest LomondQ7985784
P2659topographic isolation2.49
P2660topographic prominence190

Reverse relations

Q1265167Dumyatlocated in/on physical featureP706

The articles in Wikimedia projects and languages

      Category:Dumyatwikimedia
Egyptian Arabic (arz / Q29919)جبل دومياتwikipedia
brDumyatwikipedia
cebDumyatwikipedia
      Dumyatwikipedia
      Dumyatwikipedia
gaDùn Mhèadwikipedia
      Dumyatwikipedia
      두미아트wikipedia
lldDumyatwikipedia
scoDumyatwikipedia
      Dumyat (berg i Storbritannien)wikipedia

Search more.