Scottish Gaelic name | Stac Leibhinis |
---|---|
Stac Levenish cliff's face silhouette | |
Location | |
OS grid reference | NF133966 |
Coordinates | 57°47′31″N 8°30′36″W / 57.792°N 8.510°W |
Physical geography | |
Island group | St Kilda |
Area | 24,280 m2 (261,350 sq ft) |
Highest elevation | 62 m (203 ft) |
Administration | |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Country | Scotland |
Council area | Outer Hebrides |
References | [1][2][3] |
Stac Levenish or Stac Leibhinis (sometimes simply called Levenish/Leibhinis) is a sea stack in the St Kilda archipelago in Scotland. Lying 2.5 kilometres (1+1⁄4 nautical miles) off Village Bay on Hirta, it is part of the rim of an extinct volcano that includes Dùn, Ruaival and Mullach Sgar.[2]
The stack is 62 metres (203 ft) high. Its north cliff appears to have the profile of a human face, visible when travelling to St Kilda from the east. The skerry of Na Bodhan lies to the north east.
The stack was climbed recreationally in the early 1900s; Norman Heathcote mentions a moderately difficult ascent in 1900, as part of a climbing expedition that also included an ascent of Stac Lee.[4]