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Schiehallion
Mountain
Schiehallion,
whose name means either 'the Maiden's Pap' or the 'Seat of the
Caledonian Fairies' or the 'Fairy Hill of the Caledonians',
is one of the most romantic and interesting mountains in all
of Scotland. On the east side of the mountain lies the Maiden's
Well, where on the first of May, the girls from local villages
would dance and drink to bring health and good fortune for the
year to come. Schiehallion also has place in scientific history,
as it was on its slopes that an attempt was made to measure
the mass of the earth using the displacement of a pendulum,
by the then Astronomer-Royal, Nevil Maskelyne. Schiehallion
Mountain was chosen for this purpose due to its isolation and
conical shape. Coincidentally, many calculations to work out
the absolute geographical centre of Scotland arrive at spots
very close to this hill. Among those helping Maskelyne was William
Mason who invented the contour line. Mason gave his name to
the 'Mason-Dixon Line' which marked the boundary of the northern
and southern states of America.
Return
To Strath Tummel
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