Mynydd Ceiswyn (SH 772 139) – Dewey deletion
This is one in a series of retrospective Hill
Reclassification posts that detail hills whose status has altered in the
listing of the Deweys and where I have had direct association with the status
change. These posts will tie in with a
forthcoming Change Register giving detail to this list and its alterations
since publication in the Mountain tables
book.
Mynydd Ceiswyn (SH 772 139) |
The
500-Metre Tops of England and Wales
are affectionately known after their hill list compiler; Michael Dewey. This list mixes metric and imperial height in
its criteria to bookend up to the 2000ft height band and takes in all hills in
England, Isle of Man and Wales that are 500m and above and below 2000ft
(609.6m) in height that have 30m minimum drop.
This list formed
one of a number of lists that appeared in the Mountain tables book published by Constable in 1995 and at the time
of publication comprised 373 hills with 164 in England, 5 in the Isle of Man
and 204 in Wales. The Deweys have
undergone extensive revision since first publication with the initial stages
forming the basis of this revision given below:
1995 Mountain
tables published by Constable with 373 hills listed as Deweys.
April
2000 Strider (LDWA quarterly booklet) publishes contact details for
David Purchase and Myrddyn Phillips who have found and list 24 and 14 possible
new 500m tops respectively.
It
was expanded versions of the above two lists that formed the basis of the next
publication:
25th
May 2000 List of Possible 500 Metre Tops by Michael Dewey listing 44 hills.
David
Purchase expands his Additional Dewey
500m Hills and Myrddyn Phillips produces lists of English 500m hills to measure and Welsh 500m hills to measure.
These
lists formed the basis of the next publication:
29th
June 2000 Possible/Probable 500’s by Michael Dewey listing 77 hills. Michael adopts following protocol; if one person proposes that a top should
qualify as a 500 by personal survey, and is then confirmed by a second person,
it should then be promoted to the main list.
April
2002 The 500+ Tops of England and Wales – The ‘New Deweys’ published in
the Strider booklet and listing 66 new qualifying hills.
25th
May 2006 Rob Woodall republishes
Michael’s main and possible/probable lists on the RHB Yahoo group file
database.
Mountain tables by Michael Dewey |
The details for this deletion appear below:
The name the hill is listed by in the Deweys is
Mynydd Ceiswyn, and it is adjoined to the Cadair Idris group of hills which are
situated in the south-western part of north Wales, and it is positioned with
the A470 road to its north and east, the A487 road to its west and the A489
road to its south, and has the town of Dolgellau towards the north-west.
This hill was not included in the original 1995 Constable
publication, but was added to the list on the 8th January 2005 due to hand-help GPS readings taken by Stephen Walker. Prior to its inclusion Myrddyn Phillips conducted
a basic levelling survey of this hill on the 7th May 2000, resulting
in 95ft / 29.0m of drop.
Extract from the Ordnance Survey 1:25,000 Explorer map |
As heights produced by hand-held GPS readings have
a relatively large margin of uncertainty applicable to them, this hill was
prioritised for a line survey which was conducted by John Barnard, Graham
Jackson and Myrddyn Phillips on the 3rd November 2007, resulting in
27.4m of drop and this hill’s subsequent deletion from the Dewey list.
During the line survey of Mynydd Ceiswyn |
At the summit of Mynydd Ceiswyn |
The summit of this hill has now been surveyed by
GNSS receiver and this was conducted by Alan Dawson on the 22nd
April 2019, using a Leica RX1250, resulting in a 604.9m summit height.
The full details for the
hill are:
Name: Mynydd Ceiswyn
OS 1:50,000 map: 124
OS 1:25,000 map: 23
Summit Height: 604.9m (Leica RX1250)
Summit Grid
Reference: SH 77241 13902 (Leica RX1250)
Bwlch Height: 577.4m (relative to summit height and line
surveyed drop)
Bwlch Grid
Reference: SH 77848 14053 (hand-held GPS
during line survey)
Drop: 27.4m (level and staff line survey)
Myrddyn Phillips (September
2020)
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