Land Regions

Scotland has three main land regions. They are, from north to south, the Highlands, the Central Lowlands, and the Southern Uplands.

The Highlands

are a rugged, barren region that covers the northern two thirds of Scotland. There are two major mountain ranges, the Northwest Highlands and the Grampian Mountains rise in this region. The ranges have parallel ridges that run through the Highlands from northeast to southwest. A deep valley called Glen Mor or the Great Glen separates the two mountain ranges. The highest peak in the British Isle is 4406 feet (1343 meters). Ben Nevis, rises south of Glen Mor.

The Highlands have two kinds of valleys. Steep, narrow glens and broad, rolling straths. Much of the land in the Highlands is a treeless area called a moor or a heath. The most rugged land lies along the west coast.

Most Highlanders live on the narrow coastal plains.

The Central Lowlands

are the valleys of the Rivers Clyde, Fourth, and Tay. This region has Scotland�s best farmland. Wide, fertile fields and low hills with patches of trees cover the entire region.

About three-fourths of Scottish people live in the lowlands.

The Southern Uplands

They consist of rolling moors broken in places by rocky cliffs. The top of the hills are largely barren, but rich pasture land covers most of the lower slopes. Many sheep and cattle are raised in the southern uplands.

In the south, the uplands rise to the Cheviot Hills.


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