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Moray
(redirected from Moray eels)

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Moray

Another spelling of Murray, regent of Scotland 1567–70.

Moray

Enlarge picture
Locator map for the Scottish administrative region of Moray.

Unitary authority in northeast Scotland, created in 1996 from the Moray district of Grampian region.

Area

2,224 sq km/859 sq mi

Towns

Elgin (administrative headquarters), Forres, Buckie, Lossiemouth

Physical

the land gradually slopes from the Grampian Mountains in the south (Cairn Gorm 1,245 m/4,085 ft) towards the Moray Firth; extensive coastal lowlands fringe an area of sand-dune formation; part of this land was reclaimed from the sea and is now covered by the Culbin forest. The River Spey reaches the North Sea near Buckie

Features

Elgin cathedral; Brodie and Duffus castles; Gordonstoun school

Industries

whisky distilling, food processing

Agriculture

some fishing (Buckie, Lossiemouth); trout and salmon fishing in rivers; cereals in lowland plain

Population

(2001) 86,900

History

numerous royal residences and setting for Shakespeare's Macbeth

Economy

The area has a rural economy, with strength in modern management of traditional produce, food and whisky.

Architecture

Brodie Castle, 5 km/3 mi west of Forres, was built in about 1567 for the Brodie family; it was extended in the early 17th and 19th centuries. Duffus Castle, 8 km/5 mi northwest of Elgin, is a good example of a Norman motte and bailey castle, with a water-filled moat.

Environment

There are 33 Sites of Special Scientific Interest, one National Nature Reserve, three Ramsars (wetland sites), two Special Protection Areas, and one National Scenic Area.

Administrative history

Prior to 1975, the area was divided between the three counties of Nairnshire, Morayshire, and Banffshire.

moray

Eel with strong jaws armed with daggerlike teeth. The large species that hide in the crevices of coral reefs can inflict savage bites. Most species of moray are found in tropical seas.

Classification

Morays are in family Muraenidae belonging to the order Anguilliformes, class Osteichthyes.



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