An Ruadh-stac
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| An Ruadh-stac | |
|---|---|
The north face of An Ruadh-stac seen from Maol Cheann-dearg. | |
| Highest point | |
| Elevation | 890 m (2,920 ft) |
| Prominence | 327 m (1,073 ft) |
| Listing | Corbett, Marilyn |
| Coordinates | 57°28′33″N 5°28′04″W / 57.4758°N 5.4678°W |
| Naming | |
| English translation | Red Stack /Red Conical Hill |
| Language of name | Gaelic |
| Pronunciation | Scottish Gaelic: [ən̪ˠ ˈrˠuəɣst̪axk] |
| Geography | |
Wester Ross, Scotland | |
| Parent range | Northwest Highlands |
| OS grid | NG921480 |
| Topo map | OS Landranger 24, OS Explorer 428 |

An Ruadh-stac is a Scottish mountain situated in the Wester Ross region of the Highland council area. It is located 26 km north east of Kyle of Lochalsh.
An Ruadh-stac reaches a height of 890 metres (2926 feet) making it the 30th highest Corbett,[1] it also qualifies as a Marilyn. It is a distinguished looking mountain which is prominent in views because of its light grey coloured quartzite rocks, it stands in the ancient Coulin hunting forest, an area of rough mountainous country between Glen Carron and Glen Torridon. The mountain is situated four km from the nearest public road but there are good stalkers paths within the deer forest which aid access to the foot of the mountain. An Ruadh-stac is closely associated with the adjoining Munro of Maol Cheann-dearg with which it is often climbed.
The mountain's Gaelic name translates as the Red Stack or Red Conical Hill; this is slightly confusing and misleading, as it is invariably seen as a light-grey hill due to its quartzite rocks. Hamish Brown comments on the name thus: “An Ruadh-stac is a grey hill, sometimes touched white by the sun but never red like its ruddy, bald headed neighbour (Maol Cheann-dearg).”[2]