Geolocate

Coatbridge topographic map

Click on the map to display elevation.

Coatbridge

The topography of Coatbridge was an important feature in the town's development during the Industrial Revolution. Coatbridge rests 60 metres below the "Slamannan plateau" and neighbouring Airdrie sits on its edge. The low-lying flat ground of Coatbridge was a vital factor in the siting of the town's blast furnaces and the Monkland Canal route. Although Airdrie was an already established town and had local supplies of ironstone, the Monkland Canal link did not extend into Airdrie because of its higher elevation. The Clyde Valley plan of 1949 described Coatbridge as 'situated over a flooded coalfield'. Tenement buildings in Coatbridge were not built to the same level as Glasgow tenements due to danger of local subsidence from centuries of local mining.

Wikipedia (CC-BY-SA 3.0)

About this map

Name: Coatbridge topographic map, elevation, terrain.

Location: Coatbridge, North Lanarkshire, Scotland, ML5 3HJ, United Kingdom (55.82249 -4.06599 55.90249 -3.98599)

Average elevation: 100 m

Minimum elevation: 14 m

Maximum elevation: 214 m

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United Kingdom > Scotland > North Lanarkshire

Cumbernauld's name probably comes from the Gaelic comar nan allt, meaning "meeting of the burns or streams". There are differing views as to the etymology of this. One theory is that from its high point in the Central Belt, its streams flow both west to the River Clyde and east to the Firth of Forth so…

Average elevation: 113 m

Cumbernauld

United Kingdom > Scotland > North Lanarkshire

Cumbernauld's name probably comes from the Gaelic comar nan allt, meaning "meeting of the burns or streams". There are differing views as to the etymology of this. One theory is that from its high point in the Central Belt, its streams flow both west to the River Clyde and east to the Firth of Forth so…

Average elevation: 113 m

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