212 BATHYMETKICAL SURVEY OF 



Loch More Barms (see Plate LXXXII.) is a broad sheet of water, 

 lying close to the sea-shore, near Barvas on the west coast, in a broad 

 stretch of low country. It is a mile long from west to east, and half a 

 mile broad. It is flat-bottomed, and very shallow, with a maximum depth 

 of 8 feet, and a mean depth of 4^- feet. The superficial area is about 239 

 acres, and the volume of water 45 millions of cubic feet. It drains an 

 area of 33 square miles, chiefly by Glen Barvas. It is separated from the 

 sea by a mere sandbar, and when surveyed on August 22, 1903, was only 

 9*7 feet above sea-level. The surface temperature was 53*1 Fahr. 



Loch Urrdhag (see Plate LXXXIII.) is a loch of moderate size, 

 between Barvas and Bragor, a little more than a mile from the shore. 

 The surrounding land nowhere rises far above the loch. It is roughly 

 hammer-shaped, with a narrow stem running north and south, and an 

 expanded northern portion. It is l\ miles long, and fully half a mile 

 broad near the north end. It is a simple basin, shallow in the south, and 

 gradually deepening northward to the maximum of 33 feet in the centre 

 of the expanded portion. The mean depth is 11^ feet, the area about 211 

 acres, and the volume 105 millions of cubic feet. The drainage from 7J 

 square miles of country enters the loch chiefly from Glen Bruadale, 

 through Loch Bruadale, which is only cut off from Loch Urrahag by a 

 causeway. The outflow is by Glen Ereray, past several mills, into Loch 

 Ereray. 



The surface was 89-3 feet above sea-level on August 20, 1903. The 

 temperature was 55'4 Fahr. throughout. 



Loch Bruadale (see Plate LXXXIII.) is a small loch close to the south 

 of Loch Urrahag, amid low country. It is half a mile long, one-third of a 

 mile broad, flat-bottomed, and shallow only 6 feet deep over the greater 

 part of the area. The mean depth is 4^ feet, the area about 66 acres, and 

 and the volume 13 millions of cubic feet. It receives the drainage of 

 6 square miles of country, including the large Loch Breivat, chiefly 

 brought by the Glen Bruadale river. 



It is scarcely separated from Loch Urrahag, and the level was only 

 3 inches higher, or 89'5 feet above sea-level, on August 20, 1903. 



Loch an Duna (see Plate LXXXIV.) is a small broad loch in Bragor, 

 about a mile from the coast. It is roughly rhomboid in shape, with a 

 narrow arm running westward. It is half a mile long, by one-third of a 

 mile broad. The basin is simple and deepens towards the east, where the 

 maximum of 29 feet is found near the east shore. The mean depth is 

 13 feet, the area about 71 acres, and the volume 41 millions of cubic feet. 

 The area drained is very limited, less than a square mile. The outflow is 

 by the Allt na Muilne, flowing north past several mills into Loch Orclais. 

 The surface was 97-6 feet above sea-level on August 22, 1903. 



