Ben Lugmore East Top
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) corrie (left) , elevation_m = 803 , elevation_ref = , prominence_m = 158 , prominence_ref = , listing = 100 Highest Irish Mountains, Marilyn, Hewitt,
Arderin Arderin () is a mountain on the border between Laois and Offaly in Ireland. With a height of 527 metres (1,729 ft) it is the highest point in the Slieve Bloom Mountains, and is the highest point in both County Laois and County Offaly. An ...
, Simm,
Vandeleur-Lynam The mountains and hills of the British Isles are categorised into various lists based on different combinations of elevation, prominence, and other criteria such as isolation. These lists are used for peak bagging, whereby hillwalkers attemp ...
, location = Mayo, Ireland , range = Mweelrea , map = Ireland , map_caption = Ireland , label_position = right , map_size = 240 , coordinates = , coordinates_ref = , topo = OSi ''Discovery'' 37 , geology = Sandstone & conglomerate, ignimbrite bedrock. , normal_route = via ''The Ramp'' in the ga, Coum Dubh , grid_ref_Ireland = L8117367379 Ben Lugmore () at is the 29th-highest peak in Ireland on the
Arderin Arderin () is a mountain on the border between Laois and Offaly in Ireland. With a height of 527 metres (1,729 ft) it is the highest point in the Slieve Bloom Mountains, and is the highest point in both County Laois and County Offaly. An ...
scale, and the 37th-highest peak on the
Vandeleur-Lynam The mountains and hills of the British Isles are categorised into various lists based on different combinations of elevation, prominence, and other criteria such as isolation. These lists are used for peak bagging, whereby hillwalkers attemp ...
scale. It is in a horseshoe-shaped massif that includes the slightly higher peak of Mweelrea at , the highest mountain in the Irish province of Connacht. The massif is between Killary Harbour and Doo Lough, in Mayo. The peak is noted for its long summit ridge that forms a deep cliff-lined headwall around the corrie of Lug More ( ga, Coum Dubh); the corrie includes a feature known as ''The Ramp'' that climbers use to access the summit ridge, as well as rock climbs and winter ice climbs. While the peak can be accessed via a 3-hour walk from the corrie below, it is also summited by way of the 6-7 hour Mweelrea Horseshoe, described as a "top three" mountain walk in Ireland.


Naming

Irish academic Paul Tempan lists Ben Lugmore as an
anglicisation Anglicisation is the process by which a place or person becomes influenced by English culture or British culture, or a process of cultural and/or linguistic change in which something non-English becomes English. It can also refer to the influen ...
of the that translates as "peak of the big hollow", and which describes the deep corrie on Lugmore's northeast face called Lug More (split into two words). Patrick Weston Joyce chronicled that the term Lugmore, which he translated as "Great Hollow", appears in several other Irish placenames; and there are several entries in the Placenames Database of Ireland.


Geology

Ben Lugmore's geology is what is known as the Mweelrea Formation, and is very different from that of the Twelve Bens, on the other side of Killary Harbour. At a summary level, the ''Mweelrea Formation'' consists of Ordovician period sandstones originally deposited on large alluvial fans, and distally‐equivalent alluvial plains and delta fans. Interbedded with these sandstones are tufts, being ash deposits from Ordovician period volcanos.


Geography

The peak of Ben Lugmore lies on the northern arm of the horseshoe that forms the massif of the
Mweelrea Mountains Mweelrea (; ) at , is the 26th-highest peak in Ireland on the Arderin scale, and the 34th-highest peak on the Vandeleur-Lynam scale.Mountainviews, (September 2013), "A Guide to Ireland's Mountain Summits: The Vandeleur-Lynams & the Arderins", C ...
, which is bounded by Killary Harbour, Ireland's deepest fjord, to the south, and Doo Lough to the north; Mweelrea, the provincial top for Connacht, lies near the apex of this horseshoe. Ben Lugmore is described as having a small sharp "airy" summit which lies on a high narrow southeast to northwest ridge that links with Ben Bury, and then on to Mweelrea. This ridge includes two high subsidiary summits either side of Ben Lugmore, both of which are of equal height: Ben Lugmore West Top at , whose prominence of qualifies it as a
Vandeleur-Lynam The mountains and hills of the British Isles are categorised into various lists based on different combinations of elevation, prominence, and other criteria such as isolation. These lists are used for peak bagging, whereby hillwalkers attemp ...
and a Hewitt, and Ben Lugmore East Top at , whose prominence of also qualifies it as a Vandeleur-Lynam and a Hewitt. From a distance, Ben Lugmore's profile is that of a long and high sharp ridge, along which its various summits (main and subsidiary) are dotted. Northeast of Ben Lugmore's ridge are the cliffs of the deep corrie of Lug More (also called ga, Coum Dubh, links=no), which itself looks into the small valley of Glencullin at the junction of Doo Lough and Glencullin Lough. To the southwest of the ridge is the valley of Glenconnelly; and where the high southwestern cliffs of Ben Lugmore West Top, Benbury and Mweelrea circle the northern corrie lake at the head of the Glenconnelly valley, known as
Lough Bellawaum Mweelrea (; ) at , is the 26th-highest peak in Ireland on the Arderin scale, and the 34th-highest peak on the Vandeleur-Lynam scale.Mountainviews, (September 2013), "A Guide to Ireland's Mountain Summits: The Vandeleur-Lynams & the Arderins", C ...
. Ben Lugmore's own prominence of qualifies it as a Marilyn, and it also ranks it as the 18th-highest mountain in Ireland on the MountainViews Online Database 100 Highest Irish Mountains, where the minimum prominence threshold is 100 metres. The peak is listed as the 29th-highest peak in Ireland on the Arderin scale, and the 37th-highest peak on the Vandeleur-Lynam scale.Mountainviews, (September 2013), "A Guide to Ireland's Mountain Summits: The Vandeleur-Lynams & the Arderins", Collins Books, Cork,


Recreation


Hill walking

The most direct route to the summit of Ben Lugmore is the 3-hour round trip via the Lug More (or ga, Coum Dubh, links=no) corrie and the valley of Glen Glencullin. A notable feature known as ''The Ramp'' is used, which crosses the headwall of this corrie at mid-way, from east to west in an upward slope; reaching the ridge of Ben Lugmore at a col with Ben Bury. While this route is direct, caution is advised in properly finding ''The Ramp'', as the corrie has extensive cliffs. This route can also be extended into a 6-hour round-trip that takes in the additional summits of Ben Bury and Mweelrea as well. Ben Lugmore is also climbed as part of the 6-7 hour ''Mweelrea Horseshoe'' (being the 2nd-highest peak on the route), which is described in ''Ireland's Best Walks'' (2014), as being one of the "top three" mountain walks in Ireland. The circuit starts and ends at the ''Delphi Mountain Resort'', and takes in all the peaks of the massif of Mweelrea, including Ben Lugmore (and its subsidiary peaks), Ben Bury, Mweelrea and the Mweelrea SE Spur (marked as point 495-metres in the OS map).


Rock climbing

Ben Lugmore's high northeastern cliffs that form the upper headwall of the Lug More (or ga, Coum Dubh, links=no) corrie (situated above ''The Ramp''), are a noted rock-climbing venue with multi-pitch mountain rock-climbs with
grades Grade most commonly refers to: * Grade (education), a measurement of a student's performance * Grade, the number of the year a student has reached in a given educational stage * Grade (slope), the steepness of a slope Grade or grading may also r ...
varying from Diff (D) to Moderate Severe (MS), and length ranging from . Some of the first ascents date from the mid 1950s, and they often follow chimneys and gullies between Ben Lugmore's various subsidiary peaks. More serious modern rock climbing routes are located at the edge of the southern entrance to the corrie (marked as Askaneeraun on the OS Maps), at the ''Doo Lough Crags'' (marked ''Teevaree Rocks'' on the OS Maps). The routes vary from 30 to 70 metres on sandstone and conglomerate rock, with rock climbing grades in the range of VS (Very Severe) to E2 (Extreme, level 2), and well regarded climbs of ''Bragela's Watch'' (, E1), ''Red Dawn'' (, E2 5c), and ''Letter to Breshnev'' (, E3/4 6a); most of the best routes were developed in the late 1980s to early 1990s.


Winter climbing

The Lug More (or ga, Coum Dubh, links=no) corrie also has a number of winter climbs, the most notable of which is ''Recession Gully'' (Grade II/III, ).


Gallery

File:Mweelrea (back left), and Ben Lugmore (centre), from summit of Ben Gorm.jpg, Mweelrea (back left), and Ben Lugmore (centre), viewed from the east on the summit of
Ben Gorm Ben Gorm () is a 700 m high mountain in southwest County Mayo, Ireland, on the northern shore of Killary Harbour. See also *Lists of mountains in Ireland *Lists of mountains and hills in the British Isles *List of P600 mountains in the Britis ...
File:Ben Lugmore from east spur of Ben Lugmore East Top2.jpg, Northeast face of Ben Lugmore, and Lug More corrie, with ''The Ramp'' (green, in sunlight) crossing it, viewed from east spur of Ben Lugmore File:Ben Lugmore and Doo Lough from the south ridge of Barrclashcame.jpg, Full ridge of Ben Lugmore and Lug More corrie, viewed from across Doo Lough, on Barrclashcame File:Ben Lugmore West Top & Ben Bury (behind, right) from summit of Ben Lugmore.jpg, Ben Lugmore West Top, and Ben Bury (back right), viewed from Ben Lugmore File:Ridge of Ben Lugmore from the south (Glenconnelly Valley).jpg, Ben Lugmore southwest face, viewed from the Glenconnelly valley


See also

* List of Hewitt mountains in England, Wales and Ireland * Lists of mountains and hills in the British Isles * Lists of mountains in Ireland * Maumturks, a major range in Connemara


References


Bibliography

* * * * * *


External links


MountainViews: The Irish Mountain Website
Ben Lugmore

the largest database of British Isles mountains (" DoBIH")
Hill Bagging UK & Ireland
the searchable interface for the DoBIH {{IrishTrails Marilyns of Ireland Hewitts of Ireland Mountains and hills of County Galway Geography of County Galway Mountains under 1000 metres