MACHAIR
''This article is about a geographic landform. For the TV series, see Machair (TV series)''
.jpg)
The Scottish Gaelic word 'machair' or 'machar' refers to a fertile low-lying raised beach found on the some of the coastlines of Ireland and Scotland, in particular the Outer Hebrides. Two distinct types exist:
★ A type of sand-dune pasture, subject to agricultural cultivation, which prevails in wet and windy conditions;
★ The land between a beach and the area where sand encroaches on peat bogs further inland.
In both cases, a machair is a former beach, left higher in elevation than the current adjacent beach following a drop in sea level.
Machairs have received considerable ecological and conservational attention, chiefly because of their unique ecosystems. They can house rare carpet flowers, such as Irish Lady's Tresses, orchids and Yellow Rattle,[1] along with a diverse array of bird species including the corn crake, twite, dunlin, redshank and ringed plover. Some machairs are threatened by erosion caused by rising sea levels as well as by recreational use of vicinity beaches.
1. Machair Profile
The machair on Berneray, Outer Hebrides
The Scottish Gaelic word 'machair' or 'machar' refers to a fertile low-lying raised beach found on the some of the coastlines of Ireland and Scotland, in particular the Outer Hebrides. Two distinct types exist:
★ A type of sand-dune pasture, subject to agricultural cultivation, which prevails in wet and windy conditions;
★ The land between a beach and the area where sand encroaches on peat bogs further inland.
In both cases, a machair is a former beach, left higher in elevation than the current adjacent beach following a drop in sea level.
Machairs have received considerable ecological and conservational attention, chiefly because of their unique ecosystems. They can house rare carpet flowers, such as Irish Lady's Tresses, orchids and Yellow Rattle,[1] along with a diverse array of bird species including the corn crake, twite, dunlin, redshank and ringed plover. Some machairs are threatened by erosion caused by rising sea levels as well as by recreational use of vicinity beaches.
| Contents |
| Endnotes |
Endnotes
1. Machair Profile
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
psst.. try this: add to faves

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español



