foot-loose wrote:I find the whole thing pretty interesting - I think I am right in saying that Scotland and England are on two seperate plates and when England came crashing upwards and Scotland came crashing downwards, thats when the mountain ranges in the Cairngorms and the hills in the north of England were formed. There is a fault line running underneath Loch Lomond which can be traced by the islands running down the middle of it. There are also two extinct volcanos close by.
Also, at its deepest point - Loch Lomond is deeper than the North Sea.
That's correct. Pangaea, Gondwana, Plate tectonics. Aargh, like studying geology all over again. If I'm remembering this from school (which, as we all know was ages ago) and not making it up, there was an ocean that separated England and Scotland but it dried up and they were stuck together -- I believe by Hadrian's Wall? Also, unless I'm halucinating, I think that all of Britain used to be part of the North American continent and I think that Scotland, in particular, was part of the American continent.
By the way, Loch Morar is deeper than Loch Lomond and is Britain's deepest body of water.
*Note: This has been typed pre-tea. If there are spelling errors or I've imagined the whole thing, I don't care*