Skip to content
The Great Britain Guide

Natural landmarks · Northern Ireland

Garvaghullion

Garvaghullion in Northern Ireland, United Kingdom.

Leglands Road, Garvaghullion - geograph.org.uk - 3935543

Kenneth Allen — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
1 h–2 h

About

Garvaghullion is a place of interest in Northern Ireland, United Kingdom — drawn from open-data sources for visitor reference. See the linked Wikipedia article for the full description.

Photo gallery

From the Wikipedia article

Garvaghullion is a townland in County Tyrone, Northern Ireland. It is situated in the barony of Omagh West and the civil parish of Longfield East and covers an area of 640 acres. The name derives from the Irish: Garbhach an Chuilinn (rough place of the holly). In 1841 the population of the townland was 204 people (38 houses) and in 1851 it was 157 people (33 houses). The townland contains one Scheduled Historic Monument: a Bronze Age wooden trackway (grid ref: H3680 7667). This was found in Garvaghullion Bog (grid ref: H365768), 9km north-west of Omagh, at a depth of over 1.5m in the bog. Garvaghullion Bog is a range of raised bogs found along the valley of the Fairy Water river in which commercial peat extraction had begun in the 1990s. By 1997 only one tenth of the original bog was left, which although scientifically important, hasn't been protected.

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Coordinates
54.6363, -7.4310

Sources

Other places nearby

Loading nearby places…

Nearby

More natural landmarks in this region

Frequently asked questions

Where is Garvaghullion?
Garvaghullion is in Northern Ireland, in the United Kingdom — coordinates 54.6363°, -7.4310°.