UKHillwalking Article
UKHillwalking recently published an article on the survey that reclassified Rhinog Fach to Marilyn status. The original article and a link to it on the UKHillwalking website appear below.
New Welsh Marilyn 'Discovered' - and it's a good one
Rhinog Fach has been added to the list
of Marilyns, following a re-survey of its relative prominence. The peak,
arguably the most impressive in the Rhinogydd, is a major addition to the list
of (now) 1556 summits.
Rhinog Fach and Llyn Hywel |
Avid hill surveyor Myrddyn Phillips established Rhinog Fach’s Marilyn
status on Friday 27th August, having established the height of the
summit and the col below, and announced the finding in his blog Mapping Mountainbs.
"Rhinog Fach has been on the prioritised survey list for a
number of years as Alan Dawson had listed it as a high prominence Submarilyn
with an estimated c 147m of drop in his Hewitts and Marilyns of Wales booklet
published by TACit Tables" says Myrddyn.
"I had an email exchange with Alan about surveying this hill
soon after getting my Trimble [survey equipment] in late 2013 and I then
promised to survey it as soon as possible. It's only taken me another
eight years to do so!"
As Marilyn status depends on a minimum 150m of drop, and as drop
is dependent upon the summit and connecting col height, both summit and col
needed to be surveyed.
"I operate a piece of equipment named the Trimble GeoXH 6000,
this gives highly accurate height and positional data" explains Myrddyn.
The Trimble set up on the summit of Rhinog Fach |
One of three data sets taken at the bwlch area of Rhinog Fach |
"I took two data sets at the summit, one with the Trimble
positioned aligned with the high point and one with the Trimble placed on my
rucksack which acts as an improvised tripod, with the measurement offset duly
noted. This would give comparison of height; in this instance just 0.01m
difference.
"Three data sets were taken from the area of the connecting
col, the 1st and 2nd on the hill to hill traverse (low point of these signifies
the important data set) and the 3rd on the valley to valley traverse. The
high point of the 3rd compared to the important one of the 1st and the 2nd
surveys signifies the all-important col position. This can get a little
complicated on occasion, and when conditions are extremely warm and a multitude
of surveys are being taken it even baffles me sometimes!"
Evening light on Rhinog Fach |
"One of the joys of the Marilyns is the variety of hills
included in the list" he says, "with many of the giants as well
as many lower heighted hills qualifying. All of them are relatively
prominent and therefore all should, on a good clear day, give extensive
views. The last new Welsh Marilyn, Mynydd Anelog (SH 151 272), is
only 191.4m high but is positioned toward the end of Pen Llŷn giving beautiful
coastal views out toward another Marilyn on Ynys Enlli."
Alan Dawson has now confirmed Rhinog Fach as a new Marilyn, the
first in Wales since the survey of Mynydd Anelog in July 2013, and the
first in Britain since the survey of Beinn Dearg by Jon Metcalf in 2018.
There's still a slim chance that new entries to the list will be
uncovered, Dawson thinks:
"Rhinog Fach has been in need
of a survey for many years and it is great news that Myrddyn has done it and
made this discovery" he told us.
"The only other realistic
possibility for a new Marilyn is Faan Hill on Shetland Mainland, a mere 173m
high. That will not be an easy one to survey. Meall an t-Suidhe next to Ben Nevis is estimated to have 147m drop and so it also has a small chance of
reaching 150m. There is also the possibility of summits being relocated, as
happened recently when Lidar data showed that White Hill near Dumfries was
higher than nearby Hightown Hill, though OS maps show it to be a metre
lower."
For the original article published on the UKHillwalking website
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