Mynydd Eglwysilan

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Elevation355 m (1,165 ft)
Prominence38 m (125 ft)
Coordinates51°37′31″N 3°16′03″W / 51.6254°N 3.2676°W / 51.6254; -3.2676
English translationhill of Ilan’s church
Mynydd Eglwysilan
Highest point
Elevation355 m (1,165 ft)
Prominence38 m (125 ft)
Coordinates51°37′31″N 3°16′03″W / 51.6254°N 3.2676°W / 51.6254; -3.2676
Naming
English translationhill of Ilan’s church
Language of nameWelsh
Geography
LocationCaerphilly, Wales
OS gridST 123926
Topo mapOS Landranger 171 / Explorer 166

Mynydd Eglwysilan is a 355-metre-high hill in the Caerphilly county borough in South Wales 3 km to the south of Nelson and a similar distance southwest of Ystrad Mynach. To its south is Senghenydd at the head of the Aber Valley. Like neighbouring Cefn Eglwysilan, the hill is named after the hamlet of Eglwysilan 4 km to the southwest, the church here being dedicated to an obscure Saint Ilan. Remains of a linear earthwork known as Senghenydd Dyke stretch across the southern side of the hill. It is considered to mark the edge of an extensive 13th-century deer park associated with nearby Caerphilly Castle.[1]

The hill is formed from the Hughes Sandstone (formally the ‘Hughes Member’ and formerly the ‘Hughes Beds’) of the Pennant Sandstone Formation laid down late in the Carboniferous Period (c. 309–306 million years ago). Siltstones and mudstones appear beneath the main upper bed of sandstone.[2][3]

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