Killary Harbour

Killary Harbour (Irish: An Caoláire Rua) is a fjord (or possibly a fjard) located in the west of Ireland, in northern Connemara, and the border between counties Galway and Mayo runs down its centre.

Killary Harbour
Satellite image of Killary Harbour.
LocationCounty Galway
County Mayo.
Coordinates
Ocean/sea sourcesAtlantic Ocean.
Basin countriesIreland
Max. length16 km (9.9 mi)
Average depth45 m (148 ft)
SettlementsRossroe, Leenaun

Structure

The flooded valley is 16 kilometres (9.9 mi) long, and in the centre over 42–45 metres (138–148 ft) deep; the sea level is higher outside its mouth, as is normal for a fjord.[1] For nearly half its length, it runs south east from the Atlantic, and then it crooks and runs directly east. It narrows after the infall of the Bundorragha River, and then widens in the vicinity of Leenane. In its innermost section, it becomes very narrow, widens where a small river comes in from the south, and ends with the line of the valley of the Erriff River. The river itself does not enter on the main line of the Harbour but curves northwards and then runs south into the inlet.

The northern shore rises sharply to a much greater extent than the southern, which is in places merely hilly. On that northern shore lies the mountain Mweelrea, Connacht's highest, rising to 814 metres (2,670 ft), and the sides of which fall steeply into the inlet, with Uggool Beach at its western edge. To the south rise the Maumturk Mountains and the Twelve Bens. The area contains some of Ireland's most dramatic scenery.

Nature

Killary has for centuries been known as a fjord[2][3][1] - "the only fjord in Ireland"[4] or sometimes "one of 2–4 fjord-type inlets" on the island.[5] There has been argument in at least one peer-reviewed paper that it is in fact one of three glacial fjards (shallower than true fjords) in Ireland, the others being Lough Swilly and Carlingford Lough.[6] A key point in such argument is that it lacks extensive steep cliff walls, but this does not take full account of the underwater sides of the valley, and the shape of its bed. The matter was considered in a dedicated peer-reviewed paper, "An Oceanographical Survey of Killary Harbour...," that concluded that Killary was a fjord.[7][8] The landform was shaped by a massive glacier, carving its way from the land to the Atlantic Ocean.

Rivers and streams

The Erriff River flows into the head of the inlet, and multiple smaller rivers and streams enter along its length. These include the Bunanakee River flowing across Uggool Beach near the mouth, the Bundorragha River (with tributaries including the Owennaglogh, Sruhaunboy, Owengar from Finlough to Doolough, Glenummera), and the Lahill River at Leenaun, and others.

On the Erriff River just above Killary are the Aasleagh Falls.

Flora and fauna

The Harbour is a sheltered waterway, and otter are sometimes found. Both grey and harbour seals,[9] and dolphins, and sharks,[10] can be sighted, and on at least one occasion there was a bearded seal sighting.[11] Salmon and sea trout are also encountered, and provide food for the seals. Some bird species frequenting the area include mallard duck and other breeds of duck, grey heron, barnacle goose, mute swan and whooper swan, and plover.

Marine zoology study

The sea-loch has attracted naturalists studying marine zoology. Irish naturalist, writer, and historian Emily Lawless, in an essay from 1898, recalled renting a cottage by the 'Greater Killary' on a research trip, in order to "extract . . . every wriggling, writhing, prickly, slimy, glassy . . . creature" from its waters, to document and analyse them.[12]

Settlement

There are today two minor settlements nearby. On the southern side near the mouth of the Harbour lies the hamlet of Rosroe, between Killary and Little Killary, while the village of Leenaun (Leenane) lies two thirds of the length of the valley inland to the east. Leenaun has a hotel and guesthouses and there are one more of each at Delphi, in a valley running down to Killary Harbour from the north.

View of Killary Harbour on the way to Leenaun

Close to Rosroe there is an old building which now houses a hostel. This building was formerly a modest house which was used by Ludwig Wittgenstein, the famous philosopher, as a quiet place to write shortly after World War II. A plaque acknowledging this was unveiled by President Mary Robinson in 1993.

Near to Rosroe begins the so-called Green Road, a rough roadway running along the side of the valley back east towards Leenaun. It stretches for approximately nine kilometres and was part of the famine relief program during the 19th century. This road passes the last remnants of the hamlet of Foher, which disappeared in the period of the Great Famine.

A second "lost village" – Uggool – lay just north-east of the mouth of the inlet, above Uggool Beach.

Economy

Killary draws considerable tourist traffic and a catamaran service run by Killary Cruises from April to mid-October is a notable local employer. Aquaculture is also important locally with a salmon farm based at Rosroe while mussel rafts are a common sight further to the east.

gollark: Since white concrete is cheaper than black, it'd be smart to just make it on the nether roof and cover bits up.
gollark: Do we have Rust yet?
gollark: We should unkrist krist and replace krist with the antikrhist.
gollark: Ah, I noticed something like that.
gollark: That's your ENTIRE BALANCE?

References

  1. Collins Press, Cork, Ireland - Ireland's Coastline: Exploring its Nature and Heritage - Nairn, Richard, 2007: "the long, narrow fjord of Killary Harbour, which forms the boundary between the counties of Mayo and Galway. ... only a few hundred metres wide. A glacier must have scoured the bottom as it moved towards the sea, taking large volumes of rock and gravel with it. Just outside the entrance, the depth reduces dramatically and there are a number of rocky islands giving a profile that is typical of the fjords of Scandinavia."
  2. ireland.com, Ireland's official tourism promotion site - Killary Harbour
  3. Ask About Ireland, official education support site - Killary Harbour
  4. Killary Harbour - Ireland's only fjord
  5. New York, NY, USA - Ingenious Ireland: A County-by-County Exploration of the Mysteries and Marvels of the Ingenious Irish - Mulvihill, Mary, 2003: outlines criteria and compares them
  6. Cooper, J. A. G. (2006). "Geomorphology of Irish estuaries: inherited and dynamic controls". Journal of Coastal Research: 176–180. JSTOR 25741557.
  7. Dublin, Ireland: Keegan, B.F. and Mercer, J.P., in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Section B, vol. 86B (1986), pp. 1-70 - "An Oceanographical Survey of Killary Harbour in the West of Ireland"
  8. A further point is that the term "fjord" has a broad general meaning, and was used by the Norsemen, as seen with Waterford and Wexford, for rather inlets much less dramatic than a "typical" fjord, but this is a secondary issue.
  9. Brussels, EU Directorate-General for Internal Policies - Fisheries - Seals and Fish Stocks in Irish Waters - p.34
  10. Irish Times, Dublin, 13 Mar 2000: Even the dolphins like Killary's cruise vessel"
  11. Irish Examiner, Cork, 4 Sept. 2017: "Thoughts turn to accounts of historic seal spots"
  12. Emily Lawless, 'Traits and Confidences', London: Methuen, 1898, p. 39.

Bibliography

  • London, UK, 1994: Immel Publishing Ltd.: Whilde, Tony, "The Natural History of Connemara" -
  • Glasgow, Scotland, UK, 1989: University of Glasgow, Dept. of Geology and Applied Geology: Graham, J.R., Leake, B.E., Ryan, P.D., "The Geology of South Mayo, Western Ireland" - illus., 75pp. - incl. discussion of the Silurian rocks of southern Mayo and northern Galway
  • Reston, VA, USA, 1988: US Geological Survey, Office of Water Research and Technology, Water Resources Scientific Information Center: Selected Water Resources Abstracts, Volume 21, Part 2 - Hydrography and distribution of phytoplankton in Killary Harbour, a fjord in western Ireland
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