The British Landscape Club

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    The northernmost lock of the Caledonian Canal, where it enters the Moray Firth at Inverness

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    Creagan nan Laogh from the train in Strath Bran

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    Grey Heron fishing on Kyle Akin

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    Near the Skye Bridge looking towards the Cuillins

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    The Skye Bridge

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    Trawler and Skye Bridge from the Kyle of Lochalsh

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    Above Lochinver on the old road to Loch Assynt

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    A billion-year-old mountain: Suilven looming behind Lochinver

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    Quinaq

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    The banded gneiss - "in places the stripes twist this way and that as if the rock once had the structural integrity of toothpaste"

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    The modern road, rolling up and down a three-billion year-old hummocky plateau

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    Because there are few man-made objects on the plateau, it's hard to get a sense of scale

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    Edinburgh from Arthur's Seat

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    Salisbury Crag in Edinburgh. Redefining a 'walk in the park'

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​Ancient Highlands​

Parts of the Northwest Highlands are amongst the oldest landscapes on Earth. The Lewisian Gneisses, a striped and banded family of rocks that form a hummocky plateau along the north west sea-board of Scotland, were formed between 2.5 and 3 billion years ago.