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Invershin railway station

Former Highland Railway stationsHighland railway station stubsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway request stops in Great BritainRailway stations in Great Britain opened in 1868
Railway stations in SutherlandRailway stations served by ScotRailUse British English from January 2018
Invershin railway station, Highland (geograph 4418544)
Invershin railway station, Highland (geograph 4418544)

Invershin railway station is a railway station in the Highland council area of Scotland. The station is on the Far North Line, 61 miles 34 chains (98.9 km) from Inverness, between Culrain and Lairg. ScotRail, who manage the station, operate all services.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Invershin railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Invershin railway station
A836,

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Wikipedia: Invershin railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 57.9249 ° E -4.3995 °
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Address

Invershin

A836
IV27 4ET
Scotland, United Kingdom
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Invershin railway station, Highland (geograph 4418544)
Invershin railway station, Highland (geograph 4418544)
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Nearby Places

River Shin
River Shin

The River Shin (Scottish Gaelic: Abhainn Sin, pronounced [ˈa.ɪɲ ˈʃin]) is a river in the Scottish North West Highlands. The river flows from the southern end of Loch Shin, next to the village of Lairg. It flows in a generally southward direction, passing by Shin Forest and over the Falls of Shin. It joins the Kyle of Sutherland at Invershin, which then flows into the Dornoch Firth at Bonar Bridge and then the North Sea. The river is part of a larger network with several tributaries, but the part which is actually called the Shin is just 7 miles (11 km) long. There are several bridges on this section, a number of prehistoric remains on the banks, and the ruins of a corn mill at Gruid. The river was extensively altered in the 1950s when the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board constructed Cassley power station on the banks of Loch Shin, Lairg power station at the southern end of Loch Shin, and Shin power station at Inveran, close to the mouth of the river. A large dam was built at Lairg, to increase the storage capacity of Loch Shin, and a smaller one just below Lairg to form Little Loch Shin, from where a tunnel runs to Inveran to feed the power station. Flow down the river has been increased by capturing some of the headwaters of the River Cassley to the west and the River Brora to the east. The river is used by anglers, because it contains populations of game fish such as trout and salmon. Fishing is managed by the riparian landowners, and the river is divided into three beats, on which the number of fishing permits issued on any one day is strictly limited. Fish lifts were built into the dams to allow migrating salmon to pass upstream into the rivers beyond Loch Shin, but survival rates for smolts which hatch in the upper reaches are small, and a catch and release policy has been implemented, to attempt to improve dwindling stocks of game fish. Habitat improvements have also been carried out, to provide spawning grounds for salmon and to increase the population of freshwater pearl mussels, which clean the water.