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Isle of May

Isle of May
Gaelic name Eilean Mhàigh
Norse name Máeyar (cf. plural)
Meaning of name Uncertain
Location
Isle of May is located in Fife
Isle of May
Isle of May
Isle of May shown within Fife
OS grid reference NT656992
Coordinates 56°11′N 2°33′W / 56.18°N 2.55°W / 56.18; -2.55
Physical geography
Island group Islands of the Forth
Area 45 hectares (110 acres)
Area rank 210= 
Highest elevation 50 metres (160 ft)
Administration
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Country Scotland
Council area Fife
Demographics
Population 0
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References

Isle of May Lighthouse
High
Isle of May Stevenson Lighthouse.jpg
Robert Stevenson's lighthouse on the Isle of May.
Isle of May is located in Scotland
Isle of May
Scotland
Location Isle of May
Fife
Scotland
United Kingdom
Coordinates 56°11′08″N 2°33′27″W / 56.185630°N 2.557468°W / 56.185630; -2.557468
Year first constructed 1635 (first)
Year first lit 1816 (current)
Automated 1989
Construction stone tower
Tower shape square parallelepiped tower with balcony and lantern rising from a 2-storey keeper’s house
Markings / pattern unpainted tower, black lantern
Height 24 metres (79 ft)
Focal height 73 metres (240 ft)
Range 22 nautical miles (41 km; 25 mi)
Characteristic Fl (2) W 15s.
Admiralty number A3090
NGA number 2600
ARLHS number SCO-286
Managing agent Northern Lighthouse Board

The Isle of May is located in the north of the outer Firth of Forth, approximately 8 km (5.0 mi) off the coast of mainland Scotland. It is 1.8 kilometres (1.1 miles) long and less than half a kilometre wide. The island is owned and managed by Scottish Natural Heritage as a National Nature Reserve.

Most visitors to the island are daytrippers taking the ferry from Anstruther in Fife, although up to six visitors can stay at the bird observatory, usually for a week at a time. The only way to get there is by ferry; the journey takes 45 minutes from the small ports of Anstruther and Crail, and also from North Berwick.

The island is closed to visitors from 1 October until Easter to prevent disturbance to the large number of seal pups. The Scottish Seabird Centre at North Berwick has two live cameras on the island, which can be remotely controlled by visitors, to allow close viewing of the seabird cities, including puffins, guillemots, razorbills, shags, cormorants and terns and the fluffy grey seal pups in winter, without disturbance. The Scottish Seabird Centre also runs boat trips to the Isle of May.

There are now no permanent residents, but the island was the site of a St. Adrian's Priory during the Middle Ages.

The island's rock is "fine grained basalt of a dark-grey colour with tinges of green and greenstone."

There is a peninsula in the north, known as Rona, which is almost a separate island.

The island's name is of disputed etymology, but is possibly of Old Norse origin, meaning "island of seagulls". Alternatively, it is from the Gaelic Magh meaning a plain - most of the other islands in the Forth, such as Inchmickery, Inchcolm and Craigleith have Gaelic etymologies. There are certainly names on the island from both languages, including "Tarbet" (tairbeart, an isthmus), "St Colme's Hole" (Colm Cille) and "Ardchattan" from Gaelic, and "Kirkhaven" which may refer a Norse original "Kirkshavn". It is also thought that the name may refer to the use of the island by the Maeatae as a regal burial site.


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