Buiston Loch

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LocationKilmaurs and Stewarton, East Ayrshire, Scotland
Coordinates55°39′32.4″N 4°31′12.3″W / 55.659000°N 4.520083°W / 55.659000; -4.520083
TypeDrained freshwater loch
Primary inflowsRainfall and runoff
Buiston Loch
Fields flooded with a small lake or flash
Buiston Loch from near Lochside Farm
Buiston Loch is located in East Ayrshire
Buiston Loch
Buiston Loch
LocationKilmaurs and Stewarton, East Ayrshire, Scotland
Coordinates55°39′32.4″N 4°31′12.3″W / 55.659000°N 4.520083°W / 55.659000; -4.520083
TypeDrained freshwater loch
Primary inflowsRainfall and runoff
Primary outflowsGarrier Burn
Catchment area800 by 1,700 m (2,600 by 5,600 ft)
Basin countriesScotland
Max. length750 m (2,460 ft)
Max. width250 m (820 ft)
Surface area0.1475 km2 (0.0570 sq mi)
Max. depth6 m (20 ft)
Surface elevation90 m (300 ft)
IslandsOne Crannog
SettlementsStewarton

Buiston Loch (NS 416 433) (locally pronounced /ˈbɪstən/ BIST-ən),[1] also known as Buston, Biston and Mid Buiston, was situated in the mid-Ayrshire clayland at an altitude of 90 m OD. The loch was natural, sitting in a hollow created by glaciation. The loch waters drained via the Garrier Burn that joins the Bracken and Lochridge Burns before joining the River Irvine.

It has been drained since the early 18th century, and is now only visible as an often flooded surface depression in pastureland situated in a low-lying area close to the A735 road between the farms and dwellings of Lochside, Buistonend and Mid-Buiston in the Parishes of Kilmaurs and Stewarton, East Ayrshire, Scotland.

It is well documented through the presence of a 2000 year old crannog, first excavated 1880-1 and then documented by Dr. Duncan McNaught, the Kilmaurs parochial schoolmaster.[2] Dr R. Munro and others.[3]

Drainage

References

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