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Linga Sound, Orkney

Coordinates: 59°08′30″N 2°39′41″W / 59.141563°N 2.661438°W / 59.141563; -2.661438
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59°08′30″N 2°39′41″W / 59.141563°N 2.661438°W / 59.141563; -2.661438

Linga Sound, Orkney is located in Orkney Islands
Linga Sound, Orkney
Location of Linga Sound in Orkney
Linga Sound from Linga

Linga Sound is the strait between the islands of Linga Holm and Stronsay in the Orkney islands of Scotland. It leads into St. Catherines Bay from the north.

The sound is 4 fathoms (24 ft; 7.3 m) deep. The northern entrance is very narrow. Linga Sound and St. Catherines Bay form a safe harbor, but it is difficult to enter. The land on both sides of Linga sound is low and sloping, so the entrance is hard to pick out at night.[1] There are reports of the long-finned pilot whale being shot with a rifle in the sound around 1880.[2] An 1891 account said that Linga Holm was no longer inhabited, and was used only for sheep. There was abundant bird life.[3] Today, grey seals haul out on Linga Holm in large number in October. About 2,000 pups are born on the Holm each year. The coarse grass also provides grazing for greylag geese.[4]

References

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Citations

Sources

  • Buckley, Thomas E.; Harvie-Brown, John Alexander (1891). A vertebrate fauna of the Orkney Islands. D. Douglas. p. 14. Retrieved 6 February 2013.
  • Great Britain Hydrographic Dept (1887). North Sea Pilot. Sold by J. D. Potter. p. 152. Retrieved 6 February 2013.
  • Smith, Tom; Jex, Chris (15 March 2007). The Northern Isles: Orkney and Shetland Sea Kayaking. Pesda Press. ISBN 978-1-906095-00-0. Retrieved 6 February 2013.
  • Tudor, J.R.; Horne, John; Fortescue, William Irvine; Peach, Benjamin Nieve; Peter White (1883). The Orkneys and Shetland: their past and present state. Edward Stanford. Retrieved 6 February 2013.

External links