Rhos Fawr
Rhos Fawr | |
---|---|
Highest point | |
Elevation | 660 m (2,170 ft) |
Prominence | 379 m (1,243 ft) |
Parent peak | Plynlimon |
Listing | Marilyn, Hewitt, Nuttall, county top (Radnorshire) |
Coordinates | 52°16′02″N 3°11′59″W / 52.2671°N 3.1998°W |
Geography | |
Location | Powys, Wales, historic county Radnorshire |
Parent range | Cambrian Mountains |
OS grid | SO182639 |
Topo map | OS Landranger 148 |
Listed summits of Rhos Fawr | ||||
Name | Grid ref | Height | Status | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Black Mixen | SO196643 | 650 metres (2,133 ft) | Hewitt, Nuttall | |
Bache Hill | SO213636 | 610 metres (2,001 ft) | Hewitt, Nuttall | |
Whimble | SO205626 | 599 metres (1,965 ft) | Dewey | |
Great Creigiau | SO198636 | 646 metres (2,119 ft) | Buxton & Lewis |
Rhos Fawr is a mountain summit in the Radnor Forest (Mid Wales), a rather isolated dome of hills to the north of the village of New Radnor. The local rocks are sedimentary shales and mudstones with some Silurian limestone. With a height of 660 metres (2,170 ft), it is the highest point in the Radnor Forest and the historic county top of Radnorshire.
The summit is located on a broad heathery plateau, which is separated from Black Mixen: the eastern plateau summit, by the cwm of Harvey Dingle. To the west is Drygarn Fawr and Gorllwyn, to the northwest Plynlimon, to the north Beacon Hill and the Clun Forest (Shropshire), and to the south the Black Mountains.[1] There is a prominent trig point at the summit, and a very useful landmark for walkers on the broad and featureless summit plateau.
References[]
- ^ Nuttall, John & Anne (1999). The Mountains of England & Wales - Volume 1: Wales (2nd edition ed.). Milnthorpe, Cumbria: Cicerone. ISBN 1-85284-304-7.
External links[]
- Radnor Forest
- Mountains and hills of Powys
- Marilyns of Wales
- Hewitts of Wales
- Nuttalls
- Highest points of Welsh counties
- Powys geography stubs
- United Kingdom Site of Special Scientific Interest stubs