THE FRESH-WATER LOCHS OF SCOTLAND 
387 
the steepest slopes were observed off the north-eastern shore in the 
vicinity of the Horseshoe craig, where a sounding in 236 feet was taken 
about 100 feet from shore; another in 175 feet about 50 feet from 
shore ; and, off what is known as the Cormorant rock, a sounding in 
206 feet was taken about 50 feet from shore. This last-mentioned 
sounding gives a gradient exceeding 4 in 1, or an angle of about 15° 
from the perpendicular. 
The steep shore-slope is further seen by the manner in which the 
contour-lines of depth as a rule hug the shores, leaving a comparatively 
very large area of the lake-floor along the central line of the loch 
covered by very deep water. This is strikingly shown by the fact that 
nearly one-half of the entire basin is covered by more than 500 feet of 
water, and over one-third by more than 600 feet of water. In the 
following table are given the approximate areas in acres between the 
consecutive contour-lines drawn in at equal intervals of 100 feet, and 
the percentages to the total area of the loch : — 
0 to 100 feet 
1892 acres 
13-6 
per cent. 
100 ,, 200 ,, 
1340 
5 9 
9-6 
9 9 
200 „ 300 ,, 
1610 
11-6 
9 9 
300 „ 400 ,, 
1121 
8*0 
99 
400 ,, 500 „ 
1329 
5 5 
9-5 
500 ,, 600 „ 
1627 
11-7 
9 9 
o 
o 
o 
2461 
59 
17-7 
95 
Over 700 ,, 
2556 
5 9 
18-3 
9-9 
13,936 
100 0 
9 9 
This table brings out several interesting peculiarities when com- 
pared with^the similar tables published for the other large Scottish 
lochs. The most remarkable point is that the two deeper zones are 
larger than any of the other shallower zones, the deepest zone of all, 
though the interval between the 700-feet contour and the maximum 
depth is only half the usual interval between the contour-lines, being 
the largest of all. Such a distribution of the depth-zones has not been 
observed in any other loch, and is a reversal of the usual rule of the 
shallowest zone being the largest one, though one or two exceptions to 
this rule have been recorded, as, for instance, in Loch Treig, where the 
zone between 200 and 300 feet is larger than either of the two shallower 
zones, and in Loch Lochy, where the zone between 100 and 200 feet is 
a little larger than the shore-zone. In the deepest of all Scottish lochs. 
Loch Morar, the shore-zone is equal to 42 per cent, of the total area, 
and the second zone between 100 and 200 feet is equal to 13 per cent., 
while of the deeper zones not one exceeds 9 per cent, of the total area. 
In Loch Lomond, again, the shore-zone is equal to 68 per cent, of the 
entire area, and the second zone between 100 and 200 feet is equal to 
164 per cent., while the deeper zones are in each case less than 6 per 
