Scotland
Beinn Mhearsamail
506M
1660FT
About Beinn Mhearsamail
Rising above the rugged south-east coast of Islay, this 506-metre Hump offers a wild, pathless character typical of the island’s interior. Reaching the summit cairn rewards walkers with an expansive vista across the Sound of Jura to the Kintyre peninsula and the distinctive silhouettes of the Paps of Jura to the north.
Key Statistics
Rank
33rd Highest in Region
Parent Range
The Southern Hebrides
Prominence
?
111m
Nearest Town
Argyll and Bute
Geology
You are trekking across the Jura Quartzite Formation. This incredibly hard rock was once sand, transformed by heat and pressure into the solid foundation beneath your feet.
Classifications
Find It
OS Grid Reference
NR496729
Latitude
55.8842°N
Longitude
6.0040°W
Did You Know?
- •The name is likely a Gaelic-Norse hybrid; while 'Beinn' is Gaelic for hill, 'mhearsamail' is thought to derive from the Old Norse 'merki-fjall', meaning boundary hill, marking its significance as a landmark in the island's historical territories.
- •It is often climbed as part of a rugged horseshoe route from the Kildalton coast, frequently paired with the nearby Beinn Bheigier, Islay's highest peak.
- •The summit provides an exceptional vantage point for spotting the small, uninhabited island of Texa and the distant coastline of Northern Ireland across the North Channel on clear days.
- •Walking here requires a certain tolerance for Islay's legendary peat hags, which have a habit of turning a straightforward approach into a tactical exercise in bog-avoidance.
