- Haskeir
"Not to be confused with
Hyskeir or Heskeir"Infobox Scottish island
latitude=57.8
longitude=-7.8
GridReference=NF615818
celtic name= Eilean Hasgeir
norse name= Skilðar
meaning of name= Possibly Old Norse for 'shields'
area=15 ha
area rank=
highest elevation=37.5 m
Population= nil
population rank=
main settlement=
island group=Uist s andBarra
local authority=Na h-Eileanan Siar
references=Haswell-Smith, Hamish. (2004) "The Scottish Islands". Edinburgh. Canongate.] [http://www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/ Ordnance Survey "Get-a-Map"] ]Haskeir ( _gd. Eilean Hasgeir), also known as Great Haskeir ( _gd. Hasgeir Mhòr) is a remote, exposed and uninhabited island in the
Outer Hebrides ofScotland . It lies 13 kilometres (8 miles) west north west ofNorth Uist . 1 kilometre (0.6 miles) to the south west lie the skerries of Haskeir Eagach made up of a colonnade of five rock stacks. 40 kilometres (25 miles) to the north west is the St Kilda archipelago.Geography, geology and botany
There is no anchorage or shelter and access via the steep rocky cliffs may be difficult, even in calm conditions. There are several natural rock arches and a high cliff on the northern end of the island called "Castle Cliff". Various small skerries lie immediately to the north and south. There is very little vegetation save for a few sea-pinks, campion, plantain and orache that can survive the salt spray.
Much of the bedrock is Lewisian
gneiss [http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/734197]History
"Skilðar" or "Skilðir" (meaning shields) may have been the
Old Norse name for Haskeir. [Maclean, Charles (1977) "Island on the Edge of the World: the Story of St. Kilda" Canongate. ISBN 0903937417. Page 33.] [Fleming, Andrew (2005) "St. Kilda and the Wider World: Tales of an Iconic Island". Windgather Press. ISBN 1905119003. Page 27. Maclean does not state which island caused the confusion, but Fleming equates 'Skilðir' with Haskeir.] "Skildar" certainly appears on a map by Nicholas de Nicolay from 1583. There are various theories that somehow the transposition of this name to nearby St Kilda may have created the name for this latter archipelago, whose origins are otherwise obscure. [Quine, David (2000) "St Kilda". Grantown-on-Spey. Colin Baxter Island Guides. ISBN 1841070084. Page 21. Quine, for example, suggests that "Skildar" was transcribed in error by Lucas J. Waghenaer in his 1592 charts without the trailing "r" and with a period after the "S", creating "S.Kilda". This was in turn assumed to stand for a saint by others, creating the form that has been used for several centuries, "St Kilda".] [de Nicolay, Nicholas (1583) [http://193.130.15.3/maps/early/record.cfm?id=169 "Vraye & exacte description Hydrographique des costes maritimes d'Escosse & des Isles Orchades Hebrides avec partie d'Angleterre & d'Irlande servant a la navigation".] Edinburgh. National Library of Scotland. Retrieved22 December 2007 .]There is a lighthouse on the island constructed in 1997 and the remains of a bothy, possibly built by fishermen from the
Monach Islands .References
Gallery
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