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Sheeanmore 282m,
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3472, 15km 4915, 14km
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Nephin Begs Area   NW: Slieve Carr Subarea
Place count in area: 28, OSI/LPS Maps: 22, 23, 30, 31, CBW, EW-ACC, EW-WNN, EW-WNS 
Highest place:
Slieve Carr, 721m
Maximum height for area: 721 metres,     Maximum prominence for area: 646 metres,

Note: this list of places includes island features such as summits, but not islands as such.
Rating graphic.
Sheeanmore Hill , also Glore Slieve, also Marafach an extra EastWest name in Irish Mayo County in Connacht Province, in Binnion List, Banded, graded and X-bedded quartzites. Bedrock

Height: 282m OS 1:50k Mapsheet: 23 Grid Reference: F87472 09834
Place visited by 10 members. Recently by: markwallace, Geo, Wilderness, FrankMc1964, eamonoc, Fergalh, sandman, Garmin, frankmc04, chalky
I have visited this place: NO (You need to be a logged-in member to change this.)

Longitude: -9.717976, Latitude: 54.025503 , Easting: 87472, Northing: 309834 Prominence: 147m,  Isolation: 3.4km
ITM: 487436 809844,   GPS IDs, 6 char: Shnmr, 10 char: Sheeanmore
Bedrock type: Banded, graded and X-bedded quartzites., (Bangor/Corslieve Formation)

Sheeanmore is the 1204th highest place in Ireland.

Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/1169/
COMMENTS for Sheeanmore 1 of 1  
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No easy way .. by chalky   (Show all for Sheeanmore )
 
Dry Weather Hill. .. by sandman   (Show all for Sheeanmore )
 
MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Sheeanmore  in area Nephin Begs, Ireland
Picture: As seen from the Bangor Trail
 
Isolated, you will work for it
by Geo  13 Jun 2023
For context, see my entry for Tawnyanruddia, where I described a three day trip starting and ending in Bangor Erris.
On the Sunday morning, after a tough day on the Saturday, I woke in a refreshed and optimistic frame of mind. I decided to continue on and try to summit Sheannmore and then Slieve Alp. My main reasoning being, well to be honest, would I ever have a better chance. The weather was so excellent, the conditions ideal, and I was already here in the midst of what I often hear is Ireland's most remote range.
With camp struck, and breakfast eaten, I went down the steep slopes in a generally westerly direction, crossed over the Bangor trail and on to a rock tor on a prominence at F88427 12300 starD. Here I left my heavy rucksack safely and easily found and made a beeline for the summit of Sheannmore. It was easy going,the vegetation closely grazed and the ground relatively smooth and before I knew it I was nibbling a soggy snack bar, melted in the sunshine, on a rock at the top.
The views are particularly good here, especially to the west and south, and it was a lovely place to spend a little time. I was very glad I did this hill, because although it's height is not considerable, it's remoteness is, and one would certainly work hard to tick it off for it's own sake Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/1169/comment/23988/
Your Score: Very useful <<  >>Average
 
(End of comment section for Sheeanmore .)

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Some mapping:
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British summit data courtesy:
Database of British & Irish Hills
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