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Loch of Yarrows

Coordinates: 58°22′39.7″N 3°10′55.4″W / 58.377694°N 3.182056°W / 58.377694; -3.182056
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Loch of Yarrows
Loch of Yarrows from its south shore, with the Yarrows Broch in the foreground
Loch of Yarrows is located in Caithness
Loch of Yarrows
Loch of Yarrows
LocationCaithness
Coordinates58°22′39.7″N 3°10′55.4″W / 58.377694°N 3.182056°W / 58.377694; -3.182056
Primary inflowsBurn of Brickigoe
Primary outflowsBurn of Thrumster
Basin countriesScotland, United Kingdom
Max. length1.139 km (0.708 mi)
Max. width573.90 m (1,882.9 ft)
Surface elevation94.5 m (310 ft)

The Loch of Yarrows is a freshwater loch and reservoir in Caithness, Scotland, around 2.46 km southwest of the settlement of Thrumster.

The loch is well known for the archaeological relics surrounding it. Just off its northeast shore are the remains of a crannog,[1] and on its southwest shore is a Pictish broch, dating from sometime between 200BCE and 200AD.[2] Just 1.35 km south of the loch is a chambered cairn believed to date to the Neolithic period.[2] The basin surrounding the loch has been inhabited since the Mesolithic period.[3]

An 1872 ordinance survey map lists the loch's name as "Yarehouse". Its etymology is unknown, though probably Old Norse in origin.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Loch Of Yarrows | Canmore". canmore.org.uk. Retrieved 1 March 2025.
  2. ^ a b "Yarrows Archaeology Trail". Walkhighlands. Retrieved 1 March 2025.
  3. ^ "HOME". Yarrowsheritagetrust. Retrieved 1 March 2025.