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malltraeth.uk






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Brief facts about malltraeth:

Malltraeth is a small village in the southwest of Anglesey, in the community of Bodorgan. It is now at the end of a large bay, which used to extend much further inland, almost creating a second sea strait in the area. The population as of the 2011 census was only 255. After several abortive attempts, a 1 kilometre long 'cob' or dyke was completed across it during the 19th century, allowing land reclamation behind it. Despite this, the land remains very wet and prone to flooding, much of it of great natural and scientific importance as a result. The former salt marsh creeks are still visible on aerial photography and evident as shallow depressions in the fields. Coal mining occurred for a time in the underlying Carboniferous rock strata and the subsidence of these workings resulted in the lakes "Llynnau Gwaith-glo". The village takes its name from the expanse of sand which used to exist there, some of which survives downstream of the Cob.

Royal Society for the Protection of Birds reserves in Wales

Bodorgan

Sites of Special Scientific Interest in West Gwynedd

Populated coastal places in Wales

Villages in Anglesey

 

© DMS 2011-