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- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Loch Tarbert deeply bisects the south Hebridean island of Jura. It is a relatively small and shallow fiordic loch, some 11 km in length and 43 m at its deepest point. The loch is divided into three...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Loch Tarbert deeply bisects the south Hebridean island of Jura. It is a relatively small and shallow fiordic loch, some 11 km in length and 43 m at its deepest point. The loch is divided into three...
- Published by:
- Forestry Commission
- Last updated:
- 28 July 2025
These data are tree ring width series collected from increment cores taken from oak trees in the New Forest, Thetford Forest and Peninsula (Somerset, Devon and Cornwall) regions. The aim of this...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 14 April 2026
Four sealochs, Lochs Laxford, Inchard, Broom and Little Loch Broom were surveyed between the 10th and 22nd May 1991 based on board the 59' charter vessel M.V.`Salutay`. The UMBSM/MNCR survey team...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 14 April 2026
Four sealochs, Lochs Laxford, Inchard, Broom and Little Loch Broom were surveyed between the 10th and 22nd May 1991 based on board the 59' charter vessel M.V.`Salutay`. The UMBSM/MNCR survey team...
- Published by:
- Scottish Government SpatialData.gov.scot
- Last updated:
- 19 June 2024
Description:
Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) has the largest natural distribution of any conifer in the world, ranging from northern Norway to Spain, and from Scotland across Europe and Asia to...
- 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...