Garvellachs
{{Short description|Small archipelago in the Inner Hebrides of Scotland}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox settlement
| name =
| official_name = The Garvellachs
| image_map = Garvellachs off Oban, Argyllshire.svg
| mapsize = 250px
| map_caption = The Garvellachs in relation to mainland Argyll, Scotland
| other_name = Isles of the Sea
| native_name = Na Garbh Eileacha
| native_name_lang = gd
| coordinates = {{Coord|56|14|N|5|47|W|region:GB_type:isle}}
| subdivision_type = Country
| subdivision_name = Scotland
|image_skyline = Beehive cell, Eileach nan Naoimh, Garvellachs - geograph.org.uk - 243191.jpg
|imagesize =
|image_alt = A rocky island with a small circular structure on it. In the middle distance there lies a yacht in blue water with another rocky isle beyond and a high shoreline in the distance.
|image_caption = A beehive hut on Eileach an Naoimh with Scarba in the distance
| settlement_type = Archipelago
| area_magnitude =
| area_footnotes =
| unit_pref = Metric
| area_total_ha = 230
| timezone = GMT
}}
The Garvellachs (Scottish Gaelic: Na Garbh Eileacha) or Isles of the Sea form a small archipelago in the Inner Hebrides of Scotland. The islands include Garbh Eileach, Dùn Chonnuill and Eileach an Naoimh.[https://www.scottish-places.info/features/featurefirst1525.html "Garvellachs (Isles of the Sea)"]. Gazetteer for Scotland. Retrieved 17 August 2024. Part of the Argyll and Bute council area, they lie in Firth of Lorne west of Lunga and northwest of Scarba and have been uninhabited since the 19th century.{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004| pp= 67,75}}{{efn|There is a stone bothy on Garbh Eileach for "occasional use" but not permanent inhabitation.{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004|pp=75-76}} The island was populated in the late 17th century but was likely abandoned in the late 19th.{{Historic Environment Scotland|cat=PLA|num=22376|num2=NM61SE 5|desc=Garvellachs, Garbh Eileach|access-date=19 June 2025}}}}
The islands are known for their early Christian connections to Brendan the Navigator and Columba and for their bedrock containing rare formations in relation to the global Sturtian glaciation.
Overview
File:Scarba Lunga and the Garvellachs NSA.png]]
The waters surrounding the islands are extensively used for leisure sailing. Due to the array of separate tidal races produced by the underwater topography there are some treacherous stretches of water. These include the Grey Dog between Scarba and Lunga and the Gulf of Corryvreckan, between Scarba and Jura,{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004| pp=61-62}} in which is located the infamous Corryvreckan whirlpool, which is the third-largest whirlpool in the world.[https://www.scottish-places.info/features/featurefirst10418.html "Corryvreckan Whirlpool"]. Gazetteer for Scotland. Retrieved 17 August 2024.
The area is part of the Scarba, Lunga and the Garvellachs National Scenic Area, one of 40 such areas in Scotland, which are defined so as to identify areas of exceptional scenery and to ensure its protection by restricting certain forms of development.{{cite web|url=https://www.nature.scot/professional-advice/safeguarding-protected-areas-and-species/protected-areas/national-designations/national-scenic-areas/|title=National Scenic Areas|publisher=Scottish Natural Heritage|accessdate=2018-05-24}} The Scottish plant collector, Clara Winsome Muirhead surveyed the plant life of the islands and published The Flora of Easdale and the Garvellachs in 1962.
Garbh Eileach is the largest island in the group and extends to {{cvt|142|ha|0|abbr=on}} and reaches a maximum elevation of {{cvt|110|m|0|abbr=on}} above sea level.{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004|p=75}} The area of Eileach an Naoimh is {{convert|56|ha|acre|0|abbr=on}} and the maximum height {{cvt|80|m|0|abbr=on}}.{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004|p=67}} A' Chùli lies between the two and is {{convert|20|ha|acre|0|abbr=on}} in extent[http://www.argyll-yachtcharters.co.uk/Scottish%20Islands.pdf Rick Livingstone’s Tables of the Islands of Scotland] (pdf) Argyll Yacht Charters. Retrieved 12 Dec 2011. with Dùn Chonnuill, the northernmost isle, being roughly half this size.{{sfn|Ordnance Survey}}
Etymology
{{lang|gd|Na Garbh Eileacha}} is Gaelic for "the rough rocks"{{sfn|Mac an Tàilleir|2003|p=53}} with the Anglicised version of the name giving rise to the archipelago's name of the Garvellachs. Garbh Eileach itself then means the "rough rock" or "rough rocky mound".{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004|p=75}} Eileach an Naoimh is from {{lang|gd|na h-Eileacha Naomha}} and means either "the rocky place of the saint"{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004|p=67}} or "the holy rocks".{{sfn|Watson|1926|p=81}} A’ Chùli is from {{lang|gd| Cùil Bhrianainn}} meaning "Brendan's retreat"{{sfn|Watson|1926|pp=81-82}} and Dùn Chonnuill means "Conal's castle" and may be named after an Ulster chieftain of the first century CE.{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004|p=75}}
Geology
The geology of the Garvellachs consists entirely of rocks of the Neoproterozoic Dalradian Supergroup apart from several basaltic dykes of Palaeogene age, associated with the nearby Mull Igneous Centre. The Dalradian rocks come from the uppermost part of the Appin Group and the lowermost part of the Argyll Group. The oldest preserved strata are exposed on the north of Garbh Eileach, a ~70 m thick sequence of carbonates, the Garbh Eileach Formation. The boundary between this and the overlying Port Askaig Tillite Formation is conformable. The Port Askaig Tillites are a sequence of sedimentary rocks that record a series of glacial, interglacial and periglacial episodes. This formation reaches it thickest development of 1,100 m in the area of Islay and the Garvellachs, thinning rapidly away from this region. The formation has been subdivided into five members, the lowest three of which are exceptionally well exposed on the Garvellachs. The sequence contains 48 diamictite beds, while 35–40 % of the formation is formed of sandstone of non-glacial origin, deposited in a deltaic to shallow marine sedimentary environment, interbedded with minor amounts of siltstones and dolomites.{{cite journal |first1=E.J. |last1=Rugen |first2=G. |last2=Pastore |first3=P. |last3=Vermeesch |first4=A.M. |last4=Spencer |first5=D. |last5=Webster |first6=A.G.G. |last6=Smith |first7=A. |last7=Carter |first8=G.A. |last8=Shields |title=Glacially influenced provenance and Sturtian affinity revealed by detrital zircon U–Pb ages from sandstones in the Port Askaig Formation, Dalradian Supergroup |date=2024 |journal=Journal of the Geological Society |page=jgs2024-029 |volume=181 |issue=5 |doi=10.1144/jgs2024-029 |url=https://www.lyellcollection.org/doi/abs/10.1144/jgs2024-029 |doi-access=free }}
There are two candidates within the Cryogenian period for the glacial interval represented by the Port Askaig Tillites, the older Sturtian glaciation (~717–660 million years ago} and the younger Marinoan glaciation (<654–632 million years ago), both of which are regarded as examples of a Snowball Earth, where ice sheets extended to very low latitudes. Dating of the Port Askaig Tillites has been attempted using a wide variety of techniques, but these have produced contradictory results, with evidence found that supports both of the options. Samples from the sandstones (those from the Garbh Eileach Formation and three lower members of the Port Askaig Tillite were all taken from the Garvellachs) have been analysed using detrital zircon geochronology and the results provide the strongest support for the sequence being Sturtian, with "youngest single grains" throughout being consistent with the likely depositional ages.
The detrital zircon study suggests that the archipelago "may be the only place on Earth to have a detailed record of how the Earth entered one of the most catastrophic periods in its history."{{cite web|author-last1=Ghosh|author-first1=Pallab|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cj9l2mrn43jo|date=16 August 2024|title=Scottish isles may solve mystery of 'Snowball Earth'|publisher=BBC|access-date=17 August 2024}}
This research also found that the sandstones of the Port Askaig Tillite were sourced from Laurentia, rocks with ages ranging from {{circa}} 3700 to 660 Ma.
History
File:Croft House ruin on Garbh Eileach - geograph.org.uk - 1410606.jpg
At least three of the four main islands of the Garvellachs were inhabited in the distant past. There is a ruined castle on the top of Dùn Chonnuill that may have been built by the Macleans of Duart in the early fifteenth century after the island was received by them as a gift from King Robert III. The fort consists of walling up to 2.0m high and generally of a similar width. The remains of ten buildings have been identified.{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004|pp=75-76}}{{Historic Environment Scotland|cat=PLA|num=22374|num2=NM61SE 3|desc=Garvellachs, Dun Chonaill|access-date=19 June 2025}} Brendan is said to have been buried on A’ Chùli{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004|p=67}} although no trace of his chapel there remains{{Historic Environment Scotland|cat=PLA|num=22375|num2=NM61SE 4|desc=Garvellachs, Culbrandan, A' Chuli|access-date=19 June 2025}} and a similar fate appears to have befallen two unroofed buildings, thought to be shielings, recorded in 1881 by the Ordnance Survey.{{Historic Environment Scotland|cat=PLA|num=22378|num2=NM61SE 7|desc=Garvellachs, A' Chuli|access-date=19 June 2025}}
There is a small anchorage and landing place on Garbh Eileach where there are the remains of a burial ground and of a fort that measures about 14m by 11m.{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004|pp=75-76}}{{Historic Environment Scotland|cat=PLA|num=22373|num2=NM61SE 2|desc=Garvellachs, Garbh Eileach, Rubha Mor|access-date=19 June 2025}} About {{cvt|650|m}} northeast of this dun there are the ruins of a house and byre with a corn-drying kiln a short distance away, probably erected in the late 18th or 19th century. The island had a population of thirty-two adults in the late 17th century but only four houses were occupied by 1861, and from then on it is likely that only the shepherd's cottage near the landing-place remained in use.
However, the most significant evidence of previous occupation is found on Eileach an Naoimh. About 542, Brendan the Navigator founded a monastery on Ailach, some years before Columba came to Iona.{{sfn|Watson|1926|p=81}}{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004|p=67}} The ruins of the monastic buildings include two chapels, beehive huts, and a graveyard with three crosses and another circular grave. These ruins are amongst the best-preserved early Christian monasteries in Scotland and the site is in the care of Historic Environment Scotland.{{cite web| url=https://www.historicenvironment.scot/visit-a-place/places/eileach-an-naoimh/| title=Eileach an Naoimh| publisher=Historic Environment Scotland| access-date=15 Jan 2021}}
Columba is also believed to have visited the island and it is one of the proposed locations of the Columban retreat isle of Hinba. Eileach an Naoimh may be the burial site of Columba's mother Eithne.{{sfn|Pallister|2005|pp= 120, 133}}{{sfn|Marsden|1995|p=110}}{{Historic Environment Scotland|cat=PLA|num=22364|num2=NM60NW 4|desc=Garvellachs, Eileach An Naoimh|access-date=19 June 2025}} The monastery was destroyed by Viking raiders who were present in the area from about 800.{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004|p=67}} Although there was a small permanent population in the 1700s the island's intermittent occupation since the Norse settlement of Scotland has likely contributed to the survival of the structures.{{sfn|Pallister|2005|pp=133-34}}{{cite web| url=https://www.historicenvironment.scot/visit-a-place/places/eileach-an-naoimh/history/| title=Eileach an Naoimh: History| publisher=Historic Environment Scotland| access-date=18 August 2024}}
A lease dated 1817 granted grazing for 60 cattle and 240 sheep on the archipelago as a whole.
Natural history
The outcrops of limestone on Eileach an Naoimh give rise to fertile soils and the slope of the land makes for "verdant" south-facing hillsides. A wide variety of flowering plants are found there including primrose, yellow flag, meadowsweet and honeysuckle.{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004|p=67}} There are scattered birchwoods and a small herd of red deer on Garbh Eileach.{{sfn|Haswell-Smith|2004|p=75}}
Gallery
File:The monastery chapel, Eilach an Naoimh.jpg|The monastery chapel, Eilach an Naoimh
File:Dùn Chonnuill from Garbh Eileach - geograph.org.uk - 4487285.jpg|Dùn Chonnuill from Garbh Eileach
File:Ordnance Survey One-Inch Sheet 60 North Jura and Firth of Lorne, Published 1925.jpg|1925 Ordnance Survey map with The Garvellachs at centre
File:Building on Garbh Eileach - geograph.org.uk - 3567023.jpg|Bothy on Garbh Eileach
File:Garbh Eileach - geograph.org.uk - 406843.jpg|A' Chùli from Garbh Eileach
See also
{{Portal|Scottish islands}}
References
;Notes
{{notelist}}
;Citations
{{reflist}}
;Bibliography
{{sfn whitelist|CITEREFOrdnance_Survey}}
- {{Haswell-Smith}}
- {{cite book|author-last=Marsden|author-first=John|year=1995|title=The Illustrated Life of Columba|location=Edinburgh|publisher=Floris Books}}
- {{Cite web|last=Mac an Tàilleir|first=Iain |year=2003|url= http://www.parliament.scot/gd/visitandlearn/40900.aspx|title= Ainmean-àite/Placenames|publisher= Pàrlamaid na h-Alba|access-date=26 August 2012}}
- {{Ordnance Survey}}
- {{cite book|author-last=Pallister|author-first=Marian |year=2005|title=Lost Argyll: Argyll's Lost Heritage|location=Edinburgh|publisher=Birlinn}}
- {{cite book|title=The History of the Celtic Place-Names of Scotland|last=Watson|first=William J.|author-link=William J. Watson|location=Edinburgh and London|publisher=William Blackwood and Sons|date=1926|edition=2005 reprint by Birlinn}}
External links
{{Commons category|Garvellachs}}
{{Garvellachs}}
{{NSAs in Scotland}}
{{ Argyll Islands}}
{{Islands of Scotland}}
{{Coord|56|14|N|5|47|W|region:GB_type:isle|display=title}}
Category:Uninhabited islands of Argyll and Bute
Category:National scenic areas of Scotland
Category:Sites of Special Scientific Interest in Islay and Jura
Category:Protected areas of Argyll and Bute