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- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Loch Etive is a typical fjord, carved into grantie and metamorphic rocks by glaciers from the Rannoch Moor area. The steeply walled, deep upper basin is followed by a series of shallower basins and...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
The Uist island chain in the Outer Hebrides is formed of Lewisian gneiss and is generaly low-lying with extensive and complex fresh and brackish water systems and a heavily indented eastern...
- Published by:
- Forestry Commission
- Last updated:
- 25 July 2025
The operational Sitka spruce selection and breeding programme commenced in 1963 with the selection in British forests of superior individuals for height, diameter, stem straightness and branching...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
The sea lochs of north Harris and southern Lewis in the Outer Hebrides are amongst the most remote in the British Isles with limited, or no, road access. Six lochs were visited during the present...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
The sea lochs of north Harris and southern Lewis in the Outer Hebrides are amongst the most remote in the British Isles with limited, or no, road access. Six lochs were visited during the present...
- Published by:
- Cambridgeshire Insight
- Last updated:
- 02 May 2025
Update, Autumn 2024:
We have now published an interactive dashboard which is designed to provide typical average daily flows by month or by site for the purposes of long-term trend monitoring. This...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Six mainland lochs south of Oban were surveyed during 1989 as part of the survey of Scottish sealochs. Loch Feochan, the most northerly, opens into the Firth of Lorne and is protected from the west...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Six mainland lochs south of Oban were surveyed during 1989 as part of the survey of Scottish sealochs. Loch Feochan, the most northerly, opens into the Firth of Lorne and is protected from the west...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Jura and Islay are the most southerly and two of the largest islands of the Inner Hebrides. Their ecology and demography is sharply controlled by geology, and the marine enviroment is also affected...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Jura and Islay are the most southerly and two of the largest islands of the Inner Hebrides. Their ecology and demography is sharply controlled by geology, and the marine enviroment is also affected...
- Published by:
- Woking Borough Council
- Last updated:
- 23 December 2022
Woking Borough Council's Brownfield Land Register (Part 1) comprises all brownfield sites that the Council has assessed as being appropriate for residential development. All sites included on Part...
- Published by:
- Woking Borough Council
- Last updated:
- 23 December 2021
Woking Borough Council's Brownfield Land Register (Part 1) comprises all brownfield sites that the Council has assessed as being appropriate for residential development. All sites included on Part...
- Published by:
- Office for National Statistics
- Last updated:
- 09 March 2025
Rural Urban
ClassificationThe 2021 RUC is
a statistical classification to provide a consistent and standardised method
for classifying geographies as rural or urban. This is based on...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Loch Fyne, which opens from the north of the Firth of Clyde, is both the longest of the Scottish sea lochs, at approximately 70 km, and the deepest, with a maximum charted depth of 200 m. The large...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Loch Fyne, which opens from the north of the Firth of Clyde, is both the longest of the Scottish sea lochs, at approximately 70 km, and the deepest, with a maximum charted depth of 200 m. The large...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
This broad-scale survey was commissioned by the NCC to determine the range and distribution of sublittoral habitats and communities within the Menai Strait and adjacent areas. The survey...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Christchurch Harbour is situated in east Dorset, approximately mid-way between Poole Harbour and the Solent. It was formed during the post glacial marine transgression which drowned the combined...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
This broad-scale survey was commissioned by the NCC to determine the range and distribution of sublittoral habitats and communities within the Menai Strait and adjacent areas. The survey...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Six lochs were surveyed by UMBSM/NCC during a visit to Harris and Lewis in 1988 (Howson 1989). Six more were subsequently surveyed in August 1990: Loch Stocknish, East and West Loch Tarbert and...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Loch Ryan is situated at the southern entrance to the Firth of Clyde and is the most southerly of the Scottish sea lochs. It is 13.4 km in length and is shallow over its entire area with an average...