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References
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[1]
FIRTH Definition & Meaning - Merriam-WebsterThe meaning of FIRTH is estuary.
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FIRTH Definition & Meaning - Dictionary.comfirth. A long, narrow inlet of the sea. Firths are usually the lower part of an estuary, but are sometimes fjords.
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What Is A Firth? - World AtlasMay 16, 2018 · Firth is a coastal region on the mouth of a river, where prevailing sea water has eroded much of the riverbed, widening it to form an estuary.Missing: definition | Show results with:definition
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The difference between river, estuary and firth - The HeraldMay 22, 2005 · An estuary has diluted seawater, a firth is undiluted seawater, and a river is freshwater flowing in one direction without tides.<|control11|><|separator|>
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[5]
Firth - Etymology, Origin & MeaningOrigin and history of firth "arm of the sea, estuary of a river," early 15c., Scottish, from Old Norse fjörðr (see fjord). also from early 15c.Missing: geography | Show results with:geography
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Firth of Clyde - World AtlasApr 26, 2023 · Arran, the largest island in the Firth of Clyde, is characterized by a diverse topography with mountains, forests, and coastal plains. The ...Geography · Climate · HistoryMissing: notable | Show results with:notable
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Places Rated: Scotland's Moray Firth Coast | National GeographicNov 22, 2010 · A popular vacation spot for more than a century, this coast offers “outstanding cliff scenery” and maintains “a strong community feeling.”Missing: notable | Show results with:notable
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Pentland Firth - VikingeskibsmuseetPenthland Firth is the name of the treacherous strait between Caithness and the Orkney Islands. It was- and is - a very dangerous area for shipping.
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firth, n.² meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English DictionaryThe earliest known use of the noun firth is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for firth is from around 1425, in the writing of ...
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[10]
firth noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes(especially in Scottish place names) a narrow area of the sea that runs a long way into the land, or a part of a river where it flows into the sea.Missing: etymology | Show results with:etymology
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[11]
FIARD Definition & Meaning - Merriam-WebsterWord History. Etymology. Swedish fjärd, fjord, from Old Swedish fiordher, fiærdher; akin to Old Norse fjörthr fjord. The Ultimate Dictionary Awaits. Expand your ...
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[PDF] Scotland: The Creation of its Natural LandscapeFormation of major features of glacial erosion, such as troughs, corries, straightening of valleys, removal of weathered bedrock and uncovering of tors. 2.4 ...
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The geology of the Moray Firth. UK Offshore Regional ReportThere were periods of severe erosion by glacial processes, rapid changes in sea level and very high sedimentation rates. Seismic profiling in the outer Moray ...
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[PDF] A new palaeogeographic model for the post-glacial marine and ...The Firth of Forth has been affected by numerous glacial cycles during the Pleistocene, which has resulted in multiple glaciations, dynamic sea-level changes, ...
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Geology - Solway Firth PartnershipThe weight of ice during the last ice age caused land to sink. Now that the ice has melted some land is now slowly rising due to gradual post-glacial rebound.
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Relative sea‐level trends during the early–middle Holocene along ...Jun 28, 2008 · ... rate of relative sea level rise between c. 8400 and c. 7000 14C years BP (c. 9500 to c. 7900 cal. BP) was 5–11 mm/radiocarbon year or 6–11 mm ...
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Scottish Marine and Freshwater Science Volume 3 Number 3: Clyde ...Jun 19, 2012 · The Clyde Sea includes the Firth of Clyde, estuary, and lochs, with a complex bathymetry, mainly sedimentary sub-tidal environment, and complex ...
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[18]
Chapter 2: Physical Characteristics | marine.gov.scotTidal range is generally between 4 and 5 m; highest tidal ranges are found in the inner Solway Firth where the mean spring tidal range can be between 7 and 8 m.Missing: morphology | Show results with:morphology
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Scottish west coast fjords since the last glaciation: a reviewScotland's west coast is characterized by its 'knock-and-lochan' topography of mountains, glens and fjords, the result of 500 ka of periodic glacial erosion on ...Western Scotland: A Regional... · Late To Postglacial... · Loch EtiveMissing: narrower terrain
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[PDF] Coasts and seas of the United Kingdom. Region 14 - JNCC Open DataMar 31, 1995 · Coasts and seas of the. United Kingdom. Region 14 South-west Scotland: Ballantrae to Mull. Peterborough, Joint Nature Conservation Committee. ( ...
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Historical perspective for Lorn - Gazetteer for ScotlandThe Firth of Lorn extends southward from the junction of Loch Linnhe and the Sound of Mull; washes all the W coast of Lorn and all the SE coast of Mull; has a ...
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Firth of Lorn - Special Areas of Conservation - JNCCThe Firth of Lorn is a SAC with 20999.35 ha, characterized by strong tidal streams, diverse reefs, and varied species, including 1170 Reefs.
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Loch Fyne - Gazetteer for ScotlandA sea loch of Argyll and Bute, Loch Fyne extends north from the Firth of Clyde and Kilbrannan Sound for just over 40 miles (64 km).
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[PDF] SEA7 Technical Report - Hydrography - GOV.UKSEA7 is the largest of the SEA regions with an overall area of 3.6×105 km2, a volume of 4.6×105 km3 and a mean depth of 1270 m. It covers the Scottish west ...Missing: length | Show results with:length
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[PDF] The Clyde Estuary and Firth. An Assessment of Present Knowledge.Estuary and Firth has revealed an area about which a the fresh water input ... model of the Clyde estuary at Glasgow University by. However, little ...
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[PDF] State of the Clyde Environment Baseline ReportFirth is the Scots word used to denote various coastal waters in Scotland. ... environment of the estuary and Firth of Clyde. Proceedings of the. Symposium ...
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Firth of Tay and Eden Estuary SAC - ScotlinkThe sediments within the site support biotopes that reflect the gradients of exposure and salinity, and are typical of estuaries on the east coast of the UK.
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Inshore and Shelf Subtidal Sediments | marine.gov.scotInshore subtidal and shelf sediments cover an extensive area of the sea bed. The east coast of Scotland in general has a relatively narrow fringe of largely ...
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Sediment exchanges along the coastal margin of the Moray Firth ...Mar 3, 2017 · The Moray Firth is the largest of only three major coastal embayments on the East Coast of Scotland. The relationships between the offshore, ...Missing: characteristics | Show results with:characteristics
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Dolphins found in UK and Irish waters | Marine Conservation SocietyOct 10, 2024 · The largest population of bottlenose dolphins in the UK can be found in the Moray Firth in Scotland, where as many as 150 individuals live.
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Measuring Bottlenose Dolphins 2.0 » About - ZooniverseOur research focuses on a resident population of around 200 bottlenose dolphins living in the Moray Firth in the North-East of Scotland, UK. Example Alt Text.Missing: dimensions ecology
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[PDF] SEA 5 – Offshore Oil and Gas Licensing - GOV.UKScotland. The Nigg terminal in the. Cromarty Firth receives oil from the. Beatrice field and on the northeast coast the St. Fergus terminal is the largest ...Missing: facts | Show results with:facts
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Inverness and Cromarty Firth Green Freeport - Business.gov.ukThe Highland region has a strong legacy in oil and gas, and an abundance of renewable energy resources, putting it at the forefront of the energy industry.
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[PDF] UK Firth of Tay & Eden Estuary 13018 RIS 2005The site stretches for some 35 km along the Tay estuary from near Newburgh to the estuary mouth. For much of its length the main channel of the estuary lies ...Missing: runs | Show results with:runs
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[PDF] Bridges of the TayNov 20, 2023 · of 831 metres length has a deck of 200 mm. thick reinforced concrete,. 20 mm. of mastic asphalt and 45 mm. of rolled asphalt. Below the deck of ...
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[PDF] The Arup JournalThe geology of the Forth Estuary at the crossing location is complex: sedimentary rock with abrupt volcanic intrusions form the steeply sloping sides and it is ...<|separator|>
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[PDF] Forth Bridge World Heritage Nomination Management Plan (pdf)of the country by train. The railway crosses the Firth of Forth in the east of Scotland,. 14 kilometres (9 miles) west of central Edinburgh, leaving Lothian.
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[PDF] Industrial Heritage AnalysisThe Forth Rail Bridge. Long. 3°23'23" W / Lat. 56°00'04". (i)(ii)(iv) C. N. Fife and Edinburgh, Scotland. The Forth Rail Bridge, which was opened in 1890, is an ...
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The mineral pentlandite and its Scottish connectionsMoving north, the origin of the name of the Pentland Firth has an altogether different story. This name is thought to originate from the Old Norse Petlandsfjör ...Missing: etymology | Show results with:etymology
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[PDF] NORSE PLACE-NAMES IN SOUTH-WEST SCOTLANDnames are usually of non-Scandinavian origin, mostly Anglo-. Saxon but also Norman, as in Bulcherbeck Burn (Bochardbech. ante 1329 Duke of Buccleuch MSS.), and ...
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[PDF] Tidal energy extraction in three-dimensional ocean modelsDec 1, 2017 · A channel with dimensions similar to that of the Pentland Firth is simulated (length of 30 km, a width of 20 km). Initially it has a.
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Pentland Firth tides have potential to power almost half of ScotlandJul 10, 2013 · Researchers from the University of Oxford found that a maximum of 1.9GW could be generated from tidal turbines placed in the stretch of water.
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The available power from tidal stream turbines in the Pentland FirthSep 8, 2013 · The tidal currents, which can exceed 5 m s−1, are principally due to the phase difference in water level across the Pentland Firth, established ...
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[PDF] Pentland Firth Orkney and West - Marine Scotland3 Water depths within Orkney and Westray are shallower as these sites lie closer to land.
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[PDF] The wave and tidal resource of ScotlandIn particular, Fall of War- ness and Lashy Sound in Orkney, and Bluemull Sound and Yell. Sound in Shetland, are recognised as potential tidal energy sites.
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[PDF] The wave and tidal resource of Scotland - COREFeb 14, 2017 · the Pentland Firth (Fig. 2) generates very strong currents in the channel. 276. Currents are further enhanced by tidal streaming, created by ...
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[PDF] Yell Sound Coast - Conservation and Management Advice• Within Shetland, the Yell Sound area has the highest density of otter. The ... Fishing using creels is widespread throughout the MPA. Whilst there is ...Missing: grounds | Show results with:grounds
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Yell Sound Coast - Special Areas of Conservation - JNCCWithin Shetland, the Yell Sound area has the highest density of otter. Indeed the site is believed to support more than 2% of the entire GB otter population ...Missing: geography | Show results with:geography
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Environmental characteristics | Solway ReviewThe Firth is one of the largest estuaries in the UK, and has the second largest tidal range in the UK, after the Severn Estuary. This creates a large intertidal ...
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[PDF] JNCC Report No. 33: Littoral survey of the inner Solway Firth and ...The inner Solway is an area of predominantly sedimentary substrata, with large expanses of mobile sediment and constantly migrating river channels extending ...
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Birds | Solway ReviewWith the third largest continuous area of intertidal habit in the UK, covering some 220 sq. km ... The Solway Firth Review, Solway Firth Partnership, Dumfries.
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Mean Spring Tidal Range (m) | marine.gov.scotDec 28, 2018 · Tidal range is generally between 4 and 5 m; highest tidal ranges are found in the inner Solway Firth where the mean spring tidal range can be between 7 and 8 m.Missing: km2 | Show results with:km2
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Solway Firth at Kirkcudbright Bay Tide Gauge - SEPA Water LevelsThe maximum level recorded at the station (recorded on 30 September 2019 ). 9.229m. This level is at the top of the normal range. 8.403m. Latest Level. -0.488m.
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Border Reivers - Roman Army MuseumIn the west, it was defined in 1092, when William Rufus annexed Carlisle from the Kingdom of the Scots, creating a new Anglo-Scottish border along the Solway ...
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About Solway Firth Partnership - Solway Firth Partnership### Summary of Solway Firth Description
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Overview | Solway Review### Summary of Solway Firth Overview
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Camden's Britannia - LINCOLNSHIRE. - Ex-Classicsfrom the mouth of Witham, as far as Humber Firth, the shore lies out with a great bent into the German ocean, chopped everywhere so as to admit little arms of ...<|separator|>
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The Humber Estuary, Eastern England: Strategic planning of flood ...The Humber is a dynamic estuary with a tidal range of up to 7 m; the channels and sandbanks are continually moving. It is naturally very turbid with ...
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[PDF] The Dee Estuary European Marine SiteIt is the largest macro-tidal coastal plain estuary along a long stretch of coast between the larger Severn estuary and the Solway Firth. The River Dee drains ...
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[PDF] Seasonal variability and regulation of methane and sulfate ... - BGsystems such as fjords and fjärds ... sedimentation characteristics is that temporal ... Strömma tectonic lineament in the crystalline Stockholm Archipelago, east ...
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Full article: Baltic sea level low-frequency variabilityIn general, the tidal height is small (5–8 cm); maximum heights are recorded at the head of the Gulf of Finland – up to 20 cm (Medvedev et al., Citation2013).
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Tides - BSHThe difference in altitude between high and low tide is called the tidal range. On the German North Sea coast, the tidal range lies between about one meter and ...
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Development of the western Limfjord, Denmark, after the last ...This paper presents new marine evidence of Lateglacial and Holocene environmental changes in the western part of Limfjorden, and provides a review of the ...Missing: geography | Show results with:geography<|separator|>
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[PDF] Development of the western Limfjord, Denmark, after the last ...Sep 7, 2019 · Limfjorden is a long strait which today connects the North Sea in the west and the Kattegat in the east (Fig. 1).
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Oslofjorden, Norway - NASA Earth ObservatoryNov 13, 2010 · The country's largest fjord, however, is not really a fjord but a rift valley running mostly north-south. Tectonic forces have slowly wrenched apart the planet ...
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Waihou River and Firth of Thames - Land Information New ZealandThe Waihou River, important to Māori, was named for its similarity to the Thames. The inlet became the Firth of Thames, and the river was officially named ...Missing: estuary mussel farming geothermal
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Firth of Thames - Ramsar Sites Information ServiceCountry: New Zealand ; Site number: 459 ; Area: 8,927.0 ha ; Designation date: 29-01-1990 ; Coordinates: 37°13'S 175°22'59"E.
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What it takes to reinstate a traditional name | RNZ NewsSep 29, 2015 · After two years of consultation, Miranda Hot Springs on the shores of Tikapa Moana (the Firth of Thames) is reverting to its original Māori name.
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[PDF] Habitat mapping for the Waikato region coastal marine areaThis area includes the west coast from Mokau in the south to Karioitahi beach in the north, and on the east coast, the Firth of Thames and the Coromandel ...
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Firth of Thames,NU (Marine Chart : NZ_NZ533_1)Firth of Thames,NU Stats. Title, Firth of Thames,NU. Scale, 1:100000. Min Longitude, 175.10. Min Latitude, -37.25. Max Longitude, 175.61. Max Latitude, -36.69.
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GPS coordinates of Firth of Thames, New Zealand. LatitudeThe Firth of Thames is a large bay located in the north of the North Island of New Zealand. Latitude: -37° 00' 0.00" S Longitude: 175° 24' 59.99" E.
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Geophysical study of the Hauraki Depression, North Island, New ...A minor hinge fault (Firth of Thames Fault) probably runs along the western boundary. Transverse faults cross the depression causing horizontal offsets of the ...<|separator|>
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Geothermal activity | Waikato Regional Council... geothermal areas and geothermal-related subsidence in the Waikato ... Evaluation of the Impacts of Finfish Farming on Marine Mammals in the Firth of Thames.
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[PDF] Potential effects of mussel farming on New Zealand's marine ...Most farms were in the Marlborough Sounds, Tasman Bay, and the Firth of Thames, but there were small numbers in Northland, Golden Bay, and Stewart Island (see ...
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Firths and estuaries - The HeraldMay 23, 2005 · ... estuaries are commonly called in Scotland, and is not used in England. Has Mr McLusky heard of the Firth of Thames? When a person brought up ...<|separator|>
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[PDF] Conservation and Management Advice - Solway Firth - NatureScotSep 18, 2025 · The Solway Firth SAC has been designated to protect estuaries, intertidal mudflats and sandflats, reefs, subtidal sandbanks, Atlantic salt ...
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River Tay - Special Areas of Conservation - JNCCThe River Tay supports a high-quality Atlantic salmon Salmo salar population, with rod catch returns showing that the Tay is consistently one of the top three ...Missing: firth | Show results with:firth
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Moray Firth - Special Areas of Conservation - JNCCThe Moray Firth in north-east Scotland supports the only known resident population of bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus in the North Sea.<|control11|><|separator|>
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Habitats Regulations Appraisal (HRA) on the Moray Firth - NatureScotAug 5, 2024 · The purpose of this guide is to help developers and regulators meet the requirements of the Habitats Regulations in the Moray Firth area ...
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[80]
Nutrient inputs in water | Scotland's Marine Assessment 2020This assessment determines waterborne nutrient inputs into the Scottish Marine Regions (SMRs) and analyse trends since the last Marine Atlas Assessment.
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A review of nutrient enrichment in the estuaries of ScotlandThe present nutrient status of 43 rivers entering Scottish estuaries and firths is reviewed using monitoring data for nitrogen concentrations.
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[82]
Scotland's Biodiversity Progress to 2020 Aichi Targets - Final ReportThis is the final report on Scotland's progress towards meeting the Convention on Biological Diversity Aichi 2020 Targets.
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Climate change: Scottish National Adaptation Plan 2024-2029Sep 25, 2024 · Impact of climate change on nature. Climate change is the biggest threat to Scotland's wildlife and habitats. Changing rainfall patterns, water ...Missing: 2020s | Show results with:2020s<|separator|>
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Impacts of sea-level rise and storm surges due to climate change in ...Sea-level rise and storm surges may affect vulnerable habitats, coastal communities, and infrastructure in the Firth of Clyde area.Missing: eroding | Show results with:eroding
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Ecological Meltdown in the Firth of Clyde, Scotland: Two Centuries ...High abundances of plankton throughout the Firth and the sea lochs created rich feeding grounds, forming the basis of a highly productive marine ecosystem [14].Missing: characteristics | Show results with:characteristics
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Grangemouth Industrial - just transition plan: supporting a fair ...Jun 18, 2025 · The Firth of Forth Special Protection Area ( SPA ) – covers a similar area to the SSSI , and also directly borders the Port and Petroineos ...
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[PDF] THE POTENTIAL SOCIO-ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS OF ... - GOV.UKThe Forth has two important terminals for exporting crude oil and LPG. (liquid ... 4.82 In the Firth of Forth the two main oil-related facilities are the.
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Scotland's Marine Economic Statistics 2022 - gov.scotNov 6, 2024 · In 2022, marine construction and water transport services generated £395 million in aGVA. This was 0.24% of the Scottish economy, and 8% of the ...Missing: Clyde importance
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[PDF] Socio-economic Baseline for the east marine plan areas (MMO1381)55 The top five farmed species by value are Atlantic salmon (£1billion), rainbow trout (£51 million), mussels (£12milion), oysters (£10milion) and carp (£6 ...
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Scotland's National Marine Plan - gov.scotMar 27, 2015 · 11.9 The Pentland Firth and Orkney Waters ( PFOW ) were the site of the world's first commercial scale wave and tidal leasing round in 2010. Of ...
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Tourist industry | Te Ara Encyclopedia of New ZealandTourism is a major industry in New Zealand, employing nearly 10% of the workforce, and in 2019, contributed about $25 billion to the economy.
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Special Protection Areas (SPAs) - NatureScotJul 27, 2023 · Scotland has 162 classified SPAs, from the north of Shetland to the cross border Solway Firth SPA, as well as within inshore and offshore waters.