Geolocate

Iona topographic map

Click on the map to display elevation.

About this map

Name: Iona topographic map, elevation, terrain.

Location: Iona, Argyll and Bute, Scotland, United Kingdom (56.30670 -6.44491 56.35095 -6.38138)

Average elevation: 9 m

Minimum elevation: -1 m

Maximum elevation: 96 m

Other topographic maps

Click on a map to view its topography, its elevation and its terrain.

Edinburgh

United Kingdom > Scotland > Edinburgh

Some have called Edinburgh the Athens of the North for a variety of reasons. The earliest comparison between the two cities showed that they had a similar topography, with the Castle Rock of Edinburgh performing a similar role to the Athenian Acropolis. Both of them had flatter, fertile agricultural land…

Average elevation: 104 m

Glasgow

United Kingdom > Scotland > Glasgow City

Glasgow itself was reputed to have been founded by the Christian missionary Saint Mungo in the 6th century. He established a church on the Molendinar Burn, where the present Glasgow Cathedral stands, and in the following years Glasgow became a religious centre. Glasgow grew over the following centuries. The…

Average elevation: 128 m

City of Edinburgh

United Kingdom > Scotland

Edinburgh has been popularly called the Athens of the North since the early 19th century. References to Athens, such as Athens of Britain and Modern Athens, had been made as early as the 1760s. The similarities were seen to be topographical but also intellectual. Edinburgh's Castle Rock reminded returning…

Average elevation: 118 m

Pitlochry

United Kingdom > Scotland > Perth and Kinross

Average elevation: 276 m

Moray

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 280 m

Inverness

United Kingdom > Scotland > Highland

Average elevation: 163 m

Glasgow City

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 64 m

Angus

United Kingdom > Scotland

Angus can be split into three geographic areas. To the north and west, the topography is mountainous. This is the area of the Grampian Mountains, Mounth hills and Five Glens of Angus, which is sparsely populated and where the main industry is hill farming. Glas Maol – the highest point in Angus at 1,068 m…

Average elevation: 254 m

Highland

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 183 m

Dumfries and Galloway

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 163 m

Orkney Islands

United Kingdom > Scotland

The southern group of islands surrounds Scapa Flow. Hoy, to the west, is the second largest of the Orkney Isles and Ward Hill at its northern end is the highest elevation in the archipelago. The Old Man of Hoy is a well-known seastack. Graemsay and Flotta are both linked by ferry to the Mainland and Hoy, and…

Average elevation: 7 m

South Lanarkshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 289 m

Kirkcaldy

United Kingdom > Scotland > Fife

Towards the end of the 16th century, a detailed assessment on the size of the townscape was carried out. The first estimate of the parish population in 1639 was between 3,000 and 3,200 and around 3,400 by 1691. At the beginning of the 18th century, the population declined. A census by Webster's Topographical…

Average elevation: 50 m

Greenock

United Kingdom > Scotland > Inverclyde

Average elevation: 80 m

East Kilbride

United Kingdom > Scotland > East Kilbride

Average elevation: 177 m

Glencoe

United Kingdom > Scotland > Highland

Average elevation: 114 m

Carluke

United Kingdom > Scotland > South Lanarkshire

Average elevation: 191 m

Paisley

United Kingdom > Scotland > Renfrewshire

Average elevation: 33 m

Comrie

United Kingdom > Scotland > Perth and Kinross

Average elevation: 111 m

Skye

United Kingdom > Scotland > Highland

Beyond Loch Snizort to the west of Trotternish is the Waternish peninsula, which ends in Ardmore Point's double rock arch. Duirinish peninsula is separated from Waternish by Loch Dunvegan, which contains the island of Isay. It is ringed by sea cliffs that reach 296 metres (971 feet) on the west at Waterstein…

Average elevation: 63 m

Perth and Kinross

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 338 m

Aberdeenshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 199 m

East Ayrshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

East Ayrshire is located on the west coat of Scotland, sharing borders with the following neighbouring council areas; North Ayrshire, South Ayrshire, Dumfries and Galloway, East Renfrewshire and South Lanarkshire. Blackcraig Hill reaches an elevation of 2,298 feet (700 metres), the highest peak in East…

Average elevation: 225 m

Ecclesmachan

United Kingdom > Scotland > West Lothian

Average elevation: 118 m

Tomintoul

United Kingdom > Scotland > Moray

Tomintoul has an oceanic climate (Cfb), bordering on subpolar oceanic (Cfc). Tomintoul does not have an official MetOffice weather station, and the temperature values below are simulated. Due to the villages' location northeast of the Cairngorms massif, it is exposed to many snow-bearing wind directions; this…

Average elevation: 374 m

Merrick

United Kingdom > Scotland > Dumfries and Galloway

The Merrick, or simply Merrick (Scottish Gaelic: A' Mhearag), is a mountain in the Range of the Awful Hand, a sub-range of the Galloway Hills range, part of the Southern Uplands of Scotland. The summit elevation is 843 metres (2,766 feet), making it the highest mountain in the Southern Uplands and southern…

Average elevation: 591 m

St Kilda

United Kingdom > Scotland > Western Isles

Average elevation: 11 m

Aberdeen

United Kingdom > Scotland > Aberdeen

Two weather stations collect climate data for the area, Aberdeen/Dyce Airport, and Craibstone. Both are about 4 1⁄2 miles (7 km) to the north west of the city centre, and given that they are in close proximity to each other, exhibit very similar climatic regimes. Dyce tends to have marginally warmer daytime…

Average elevation: 52 m

Shetland

United Kingdom > Scotland

Walter Scott's 1822 novel The Pirate is set in "a remote part of Shetland", and was inspired by his 1814 visit to the islands. The name Jarlshof meaning "Earl's Mansion" is a coinage of his. Robert Cowie, a doctor born in Lerwick published the 1874 work.Shetland: Descriptive and Historical; Being a Graduation…

Average elevation: 4 m

Argyll and Bute

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 683 m

Hebrides

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 94 m

Aboyne

United Kingdom > Scotland > Aberdeenshire

Average elevation: 188 m

Fife

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 67 m

Midlothian

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 236 m

North Lanarkshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 149 m

Aberdeen City

United Kingdom > Scotland

Two weather stations collect climate data for the area, Aberdeen/Dyce Airport, and Craibstone. Both are about 4+1⁄2 miles (7 km) to the north west of the city centre, and given that they are in close proximity to each other, exhibit very similar climatic regimes. Dyce tends to have marginally warmer daytime…

Average elevation: 46 m

West Lothian

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 184 m

East Lothian

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 132 m

Lewis and Harris

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 28 m

Dundee City

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 74 m

Argyll and Bute

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 84 m

Caithness

United Kingdom > Scotland

Caithness extends about 30 miles (48 km) north-south and about 30 miles (48 km) east-west, with a roughly triangular-shaped area of about 712 sq mi (1,840 km2). The topography is generally flat, in contrast to the majority of the remainder of the North of Scotland. Until the latter part of the 20th century…

Average elevation: 79 m

Scottish Highlands

United Kingdom > Scotland > Highland

The entire region was covered by ice sheets during the Pleistocene ice ages, save perhaps for a few nunataks. The complex geomorphology includes incised valleys and lochs carved by the action of mountain streams and ice, and a topography of irregularly distributed mountains whose summits have similar heights…

Average elevation: 907 m

South Ayrshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

The number of hours of natural sunshine in South Ayrshire is controlled by the length of day and by cloudiness. In general, December is the dullest month and May or June the sunniest. Sunshine duration decreases with increasing altitude, increasing latitude and distance from the coast. Local topography also…

Average elevation: 151 m

Scottish Borders

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 257 m

Renfrewshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 104 m

North Ayrshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 80 m

The Campsie Fells

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 431 m

Western Isles

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 23 m

South Queensferry

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 31 m

Ayrshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 141 m

River Tweed

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 236 m

River Clyde

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 245 m

Bute

United Kingdom > Scotland > Argyll and Bute > Ardbeg

Average elevation: 41 m

Banffshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 191 m

Stirlingshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 222 m

Mull of Kintyre

United Kingdom > Scotland

Ailsa Craig and the County Antrim coast of Ulster and Rathlin Island are all clearly visible from the Mull. On clearer days it is also possible to make out Malin Head in Inishowen in County Donegal in the west of Ulster, and the Ayrshire coast on the other side of Ailsa Craig. Other islands in the Firth of…

Average elevation: 84 m

Falkirk

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 105 m

Auchencorth Moss

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 281 m

Devil's Beef Tub

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 376 m

Grey Mare's Tail

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 466 m

Meall Aundrary

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 194 m

Burian Hole

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 36 m

River Dee

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 299 m

River Don

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 257 m

Sgùrr na Stri

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 92 m

Braid Hill

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 353 m

Buachaille Etive Mor

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 585 m

Glen Croe

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 355 m

Inverness-shire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 333 m

Barrnacarry Bay

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 32 m

Stirling

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 293 m

East Dunbartonshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 161 m

West Dunbartonshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 101 m

Clackmannanshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 175 m

Western Isles

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 57 m

Lanarkshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 183 m

East Renfrewshire

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 163 m

Inverclyde

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 141 m

River Spey

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 336 m

Rubha nam Bùthan

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 15 m

Sea of the Hebrides

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 18 m

Firth of Clyde

United Kingdom > Scotland

Average elevation: 0 m

Gorebridge

United Kingdom > Scotland > Midlothian

Average elevation: 171 m

Peebles

United Kingdom > Scotland > Scottish Borders

Average elevation: 275 m

Strathaven

United Kingdom > Scotland > South Lanarkshire

Average elevation: 216 m

Livingston

United Kingdom > Scotland > West Lothian

Average elevation: 158 m

Linlithgow

United Kingdom > Scotland > West Lothian

Average elevation: 95 m

Ayr

United Kingdom > Scotland > South Ayrshire

Average elevation: 18 m

Aviemore

United Kingdom > Scotland > Highland

Average elevation: 331 m

Elgin

United Kingdom > Scotland > Moray

Elgin is first documented in the Cartulary of Moray in 1190 AD. It was created a royal burgh in the 12th century by King David I of Scotland, and by that time had a castle on top of the present-day Lady Hill to the west of the town. The origin of the name Elgin is likely to be Celtic. It may derive from…

Average elevation: 26 m

Prestwick

United Kingdom > Scotland > South Ayrshire

Average elevation: 18 m

Cumbernauld

United Kingdom > Scotland > North Lanarkshire > Cumbernauld

Cumbernauld's name probably comes from the Gaelic comar nan allt, meaning "meeting of the burns or streams". There are differing views as to the etymology of this. One theory is that from its high point in the Central Belt, its streams flow both west to the River Clyde and east to the Firth of Forth so…

Average elevation: 111 m

Fort William

United Kingdom > Scotland > Highland

Fort William has an oceanic climate (Cfb) with moderate, but generally cool, temperatures and abundant precipitation. In the towns immediate vicinity, there are significant variations in elevation, which leads to some uninhabited areas near the town having a subpolar oceanic climate (Cfc), or, at the absolute…

Average elevation: 122 m

Lewis

United Kingdom > Scotland > Western Isles

Average elevation: 42 m

Ben Nevis

United Kingdom > Scotland > Highland

Ben Nevis has a highland (alpine) maritime (oceanic) polar climate (ET climate in the Köppen classification). Ben Nevis's elevation, maritime location and topography frequently lead to cool and cloudy weather conditions, which can pose a danger to ill-equipped walkers. According to the observations carried…

Average elevation: 912 m

Altnaharra

United Kingdom > Scotland > Highland

Average elevation: 126 m