View allAll Photos Tagged CRWN
Capilla Bryn Crwn - Bryn Crwn
La actual capilla fue construida en el año 1900 en la chacra Nº 205 de Catherine Hughes de Mariani, perteneciente a la unificación de varias congregaciones (no denominacional
rwn
Psyclon Nine
The Hellions of Hollywood Tour
Jabber Jaws | Allentown, PA
Septembers 08, 2013
© 2013 Henry Chung
Setlist:
We the Fallen
The Derelict (God Forsaken)
Shadows Unveiled
Afferte MiHi Mortem
Crwn Thy Frnicatr
Anaesthetic (For the Pathetic)
Suffer Well
Behind a Serrated Grin
Better Than Suicide
Glamour Through the Debris
Genocide
As You Sleep
Encore:
The Saint And the Valentine
Use Once and Destroy
Parasitic
2015.12.06 | Reese Lansangan's "Arigato Internet!" Album Launch
Tom's Story | Jensen and The Flips | Gentle Universe | crwn
#ArigatoInternet | #Reese1stAlbum
Psyclon Nine
The Hellions of Hollywood Tour
Jabber Jaws | Allentown, PA
Septembers 08, 2013
© 2013 Henry Chung
Setlist:
We the Fallen
The Derelict (God Forsaken)
Shadows Unveiled
Afferte MiHi Mortem
Crwn Thy Frnicatr
Anaesthetic (For the Pathetic)
Suffer Well
Behind a Serrated Grin
Better Than Suicide
Glamour Through the Debris
Genocide
As You Sleep
Encore:
The Saint And the Valentine
Use Once and Destroy
Parasitic
Psyclon Nine
The Hellions of Hollywood Tour
Jabber Jaws | Allentown, PA
Septembers 08, 2013
© 2013 Henry Chung
Setlist:
We the Fallen
The Derelict (God Forsaken)
Shadows Unveiled
Afferte MiHi Mortem
Crwn Thy Frnicatr
Anaesthetic (For the Pathetic)
Suffer Well
Behind a Serrated Grin
Better Than Suicide
Glamour Through the Debris
Genocide
As You Sleep
Encore:
The Saint And the Valentine
Use Once and Destroy
Parasitic
Psyclon Nine
The Hellions of Hollywood Tour
Jabber Jaws | Allentown, PA
Septembers 08, 2013
© 2013 Henry Chung
Setlist:
We the Fallen
The Derelict (God Forsaken)
Shadows Unveiled
Afferte MiHi Mortem
Crwn Thy Frnicatr
Anaesthetic (For the Pathetic)
Suffer Well
Behind a Serrated Grin
Better Than Suicide
Glamour Through the Debris
Genocide
As You Sleep
Encore:
The Saint And the Valentine
Use Once and Destroy
Parasitic
Arenicola marina. Lwgwd. Y pibast ar waelod y llun yn dangos lle mae'r cynffon, a'r pantiau crwn uwchben lle mae'r pen.
Psyclon Nine
The Hellions of Hollywood Tour
Jabber Jaws | Allentown, PA
Septembers 08, 2013
© 2013 Henry Chung
Setlist:
We the Fallen
The Derelict (God Forsaken)
Shadows Unveiled
Afferte MiHi Mortem
Crwn Thy Frnicatr
Anaesthetic (For the Pathetic)
Suffer Well
Behind a Serrated Grin
Better Than Suicide
Glamour Through the Debris
Genocide
As You Sleep
Encore:
The Saint And the Valentine
Use Once and Destroy
Parasitic
Skip the Danish, true Danes prefer bacon. Read how Danish Crown, Europe’s largest meat-processor, built a network that maintains this reputation and powers everything from hand scanners and PCs to smartphones and tablets. juni.pr/Crwn
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août 1999
Crotone il "tesoro di Hera", diadema d'oro (dal santuario di Hera al Capo Colonna:-edificio B dell'Heraion)
Adeiladwyd yr amffitheatr yng Nghaerllion ar gyfer Isca, caer lleng Rufeinig, tua 90 OC. Roedd yn enwog fel 'Bwrdd Crwn y Brenin Arthur' yn y Canol Oesoedd.
____________________________________________
Famed in the Middle Ages as ‘King Arthur’s Round Table’, the amphitheatre at Caerleon was built to serve the Roman legionary fortress of Isca around AD 90.
© Cadw, Llywodraeth Cymru (Hawlfraint y Goron) / Cadw, Welsh Government (Crown Copyright)
Creu model o dŷ crwn. Plant ysgol lleol yn cymryd rhan mewn gweithdai creadigol fel rhan o Brosiect Cymunedol Llanmelin.
Building a model roundhouse. Local school pupils take part in creative workshops as part of the Llanmelin Community Project.
DJ Khaled spoke with Elliot Wilson at the NYU Skirball Center as part of a interview series with CRWN on April 19, 2016.
Photos by Cameron Robert
From Tre'r Ceiri /
In his excellent book A History of Wales, John Davies writes: "Gwynedd has one of the most remarkable prehistoric sites in Britain - the settlement of Tre'r Ceiri on the slopes of Yr Eifl. It is surrounded by a stone wall which in places is still as much as four metres in height, and within the walls are the ruins of about a hundred and fifty stone huts. There is evidence that the village was occupied in the Roman period, but it appears that its beginnings below to the years around 200 BC. The huts, with their thick walls and turf roofs, were not doubt quite snug, but it is reasonable to assume - as Tre'r Ceiri is over 400 metres above sea level - that the huts were the summer habitation of summer shepherds whose winter dwellings in the lowlands have long since been obliterated."
Yn ei lyfr gwych Hanes Cymru, mae John Davies yn ysgrifennu: "Ceir clogwyn-gestyll ar arfordir gorllewin Gwynedd hefyd. Yno yn ogystal y mae un o safleoedd cynhanesyddol hynotaf Prydain, sef Tre'r Ceiri ar lechweddau'r Eifl. Fe'i hamgylchynir gan fur o gerrig sydd mewn mannau yn dal i fod gymaint a phedwar metr o uchder, ac o fewn ei muriau y mae cant a hanner o gytiau crwn. Cafwyd tystiolaeth am ddefnyddio'r pentref yn y cyfnod Rhufeinig ond ymddengys fod dechreuadau'r gaer yn perthyn i'r blynyddoedd o gwmpas 200 CC. Diau fod y cytiau yn eithaf clyd gyda'u muriau cerrig trwchus a'u toeau tywyrch, ond mae rhesymol yw credu - a'r pentref wedi leoli 400 metr uwchlaw'r mor - mai cartref i fugeiliaid haf ydoedd a bod eu hendrefi ar y gwastadeddau wedi'u dileu gan weithgarwch amaethyddol y canrifoedd."
From Tre'r Ceiri /
In his excellent book A History of Wales, John Davies writes: "Gwynedd has one of the most remarkable prehistoric sites in Britain - the settlement of Tre'r Ceiri on the slopes of Yr Eifl. It is surrounded by a stone wall which in places is still as much as four metres in height, and within the walls are the ruins of about a hundred and fifty stone huts. There is evidence that the village was occupied in the Roman period, but it appears that its beginnings below to the years around 200 BC. The huts, with their thick walls and turf roofs, were not doubt quite snug, but it is reasonable to assume - as Tre'r Ceiri is over 400 metres above sea level - that the huts were the summer habitation of summer shepherds whose winter dwellings in the lowlands have long since been obliterated."
Yn ei lyfr gwych Hanes Cymru, mae John Davies yn ysgrifennu: "Ceir clogwyn-gestyll ar arfordir gorllewin Gwynedd hefyd. Yno yn ogystal y mae un o safleoedd cynhanesyddol hynotaf Prydain, sef Tre'r Ceiri ar lechweddau'r Eifl. Fe'i hamgylchynir gan fur o gerrig sydd mewn mannau yn dal i fod gymaint a phedwar metr o uchder, ac o fewn ei muriau y mae cant a hanner o gytiau crwn. Cafwyd tystiolaeth am ddefnyddio'r pentref yn y cyfnod Rhufeinig ond ymddengys fod dechreuadau'r gaer yn perthyn i'r blynyddoedd o gwmpas 200 CC. Diau fod y cytiau yn eithaf clyd gyda'u muriau cerrig trwchus a'u toeau tywyrch, ond mae rhesymol yw credu - a'r pentref wedi leoli 400 metr uwchlaw'r mor - mai cartref i fugeiliaid haf ydoedd a bod eu hendrefi ar y gwastadeddau wedi'u dileu gan weithgarwch amaethyddol y canrifoedd."
DJ Khaled spoke with Elliot Wilson at the NYU Skirball Center as part of a interview series with CRWN on April 19, 2016.
Photos by Cameron Robert
Psyclon Nine
The Hellions of Hollywood Tour
Jabber Jaws | Allentown, PA
Septembers 08, 2013
© 2013 Henry Chung
Setlist:
We the Fallen
The Derelict (God Forsaken)
Shadows Unveiled
Afferte MiHi Mortem
Crwn Thy Frnicatr
Anaesthetic (For the Pathetic)
Suffer Well
Behind a Serrated Grin
Better Than Suicide
Glamour Through the Debris
Genocide
As You Sleep
Encore:
The Saint And the Valentine
Use Once and Destroy
Parasitic
From Tre'r Ceiri /
In his excellent book A History of Wales, John Davies writes: "Gwynedd has one of the most remarkable prehistoric sites in Britain - the settlement of Tre'r Ceiri on the slopes of Yr Eifl. It is surrounded by a stone wall which in places is still as much as four metres in height, and within the walls are the ruins of about a hundred and fifty stone huts. There is evidence that the village was occupied in the Roman period, but it appears that its beginnings belong to the years around 200 BC. The huts, with their thick walls and turf roofs, were not doubt quite snug, but it is reasonable to assume - as Tre'r Ceiri is over 400 metres above sea level - that the huts were the summer habitation of shepherds whose winter dwellings in the lowlands have long since been obliterated."
Yn ei lyfr gwych Hanes Cymru, mae John Davies yn ysgrifennu: "Ceir clogwyn-gestyll ar arfordir gorllewin Gwynedd hefyd. Yno yn ogystal y mae un o safleoedd cynhanesyddol hynotaf Prydain, sef Tre'r Ceiri ar lechweddau'r Eifl. Fe'i hamgylchynir gan fur o gerrig sydd mewn mannau yn dal i fod gymaint a phedwar metr o uchder, ac o fewn ei muriau y mae cant a hanner o gytiau crwn. Cafwyd tystiolaeth am ddefnyddio'r pentref yn y cyfnod Rhufeinig ond ymddengys fod dechreuadau'r gaer yn perthyn i'r blynyddoedd o gwmpas 200 CC. Diau fod y cytiau yn eithaf clyd gyda'u muriau cerrig trwchus a'u toeau tywyrch, ond mae rhesymol yw credu - a'r pentref wedi leoli 400 metr uwchlaw'r mor - mai cartref i fugeiliaid haf ydoedd a bod eu hendrefi ar y gwastadeddau wedi'u dileu gan weithgarwch amaethyddol y canrifoedd."
2015.12.06 | Reese Lansangan's "Arigato Internet!" Album Launch
Tom's Story | Jensen and The Flips | Gentle Universe | crwn
#ArigatoInternet | #Reese1stAlbum
The roundhouses of Tre'r Ceiri /
In his excellent book A History of Wales, John Davies writes: "Gwynedd has one of the most remarkable prehistoric sites in Britain - the settlement of Tre'r Ceiri on the slopes of Yr Eifl. It is surrounded by a stone wall which in places is still as much as four metres in height, and within the walls are the ruins of about a hundred and fifty stone huts. There is evidence that the village was occupied in the Roman period, but it appears that its beginnings belong to the years around 200 BC. The huts, with their thick walls and turf roofs, were not doubt quite snug, but it is reasonable to assume - as Tre'r Ceiri is over 400 metres above sea level - that the huts were the summer habitation of summer shepherds whose winter dwellings in the lowlands have long since been obliterated."
Yn ei lyfr gwych Hanes Cymru, mae John Davies yn ysgrifennu: "Ceir clogwyn-gestyll ar arfordir gorllewin Gwynedd hefyd. Yno yn ogystal y mae un o safleoedd cynhanesyddol hynotaf Prydain, sef Tre'r Ceiri ar lechweddau'r Eifl. Fe'i hamgylchynir gan fur o gerrig sydd mewn mannau yn dal i fod gymaint a phedwar metr o uchder, ac o fewn ei muriau y mae cant a hanner o gytiau crwn. Cafwyd tystiolaeth am ddefnyddio'r pentref yn y cyfnod Rhufeinig ond ymddengys fod dechreuadau'r gaer yn perthyn i'r blynyddoedd o gwmpas 200 CC. Diau fod y cytiau yn eithaf clyd gyda'u muriau cerrig trwchus a'u toeau tywyrch, ond mae rhesymol yw credu - a'r pentref wedi leoli 400 metr uwchlaw'r mor - mai cartref i fugeiliaid haf ydoedd a bod eu hendrefi ar y gwastadeddau wedi'u dileu gan weithgarwch amaethyddol y canrifoedd."
The main entrance into Tre'r Ceiri /
In his excellent book A History of Wales, John Davies writes: "Gwynedd has one of the most remarkable prehistoric sites in Britain - the settlement of Tre'r Ceiri on the slopes of Yr Eifl. It is surrounded by a stone wall which in places is still as much as four metres in height, and within the walls are the ruins of about a hundred and fifty stone huts. There is evidence that the village was occupied in the Roman period, but it appears that its beginnings below to the years around 200 BC. The huts, with their thick walls and turf roofs, were not doubt quite snug, but it is reasonable to assume - as Tre'r Ceiri is over 400 metres above sea level - that the huts were the summer habitation of summer shepherds whose winter dwellings in the lowlands have long since been obliterated."
Yn ei lyfr gwych Hanes Cymru, mae John Davies yn ysgrifennu: "Ceir clogwyn-gestyll ar arfordir gorllewin Gwynedd hefyd. Yno yn ogystal y mae un o safleoedd cynhanesyddol hynotaf Prydain, sef Tre'r Ceiri ar lechweddau'r Eifl. Fe'i hamgylchynir gan fur o gerrig sydd mewn mannau yn dal i fod gymaint a phedwar metr o uchder, ac o fewn ei muriau y mae cant a hanner o gytiau crwn. Cafwyd tystiolaeth am ddefnyddio'r pentref yn y cyfnod Rhufeinig ond ymddengys fod dechreuadau'r gaer yn perthyn i'r blynyddoedd o gwmpas 200 CC. Diau fod y cytiau yn eithaf clyd gyda'u muriau cerrig trwchus a'u toeau tywyrch, ond mae rhesymol yw credu - a'r pentref wedi leoli 400 metr uwchlaw'r mor - mai cartref i fugeiliaid haf ydoedd a bod eu hendrefi ar y gwastadeddau wedi'u dileu gan weithgarwch amaethyddol y canrifoedd."
The Postcard
A postally unused Dainty Series postcard that was published by E. T. W. Dennis & Sons Ltd. of London and Scarborough. The image is a glossy real photograph, and the card, which has a divided back, was printed in Great Britain.
Barmouth
Barmouth is a seaside town in the county of Gwynedd, north-western Wales, lying on the estuary of the Afon Mawddach and Cardigan Bay.
The town grew around the shipbuilding industry, and more recently as a seaside resort. Notable buildings include the medieval Tŷ Gwyn tower house, the 19th. century Tŷ Crwn roundhouse prison and St. John's Church.
William Wordsworth, a visitor to Barmouth in the 19th. century, described it thus:
"With a fine sea view in front, the mountains
behind, the glorious estuary running eight
miles inland, and Cadair Idris within compass
of a day's walk, Barmouth can always hold its
own against any rival."
Dinas Oleu (Citadel of Light), which is located east of the town on the adjoining hillside, was the first tract of land to be donated to the National Trust.
Barmouth features prominently in the novel 'Austerlitz' by W G Sebald. The town is featured in an idyllic light, with the narrator visiting several times during his childhood. The panoramic landscape is described in the following paragraph:
"Finally, when we left the southern bank and
crawled to the opposite side over the bridge,
almost a mile long and supported on mighty
posts of oak, on our right the river bed,
inundated by the sea at high tide and looking
like a mountain lake, on our left Barmouth bay
stretching to the bright horizon, I felt so joyful
that I often scarcely knew where to look first.
To the south-west the terrain lay open in a wide
semi-circle, so that from the forecourt of the house
you had a view of the full length of the estuary from
Dolgellau to Barmouth, while these places themselves
were excluded from the panorama, which was almost
devoid of human habitations, by a rocky outcrop on
one side, and a laurel-grown hill on the other.
Only on the far side of the river could the little village
of Arthog be seen - in certain atmospheric conditions,
said Austerlitz, you might have thought it an eternity
away - infinitesimally small, with the shadow of Cadair
Idris rising behind it to a height of almost three
thousand feet above the shimmering sea."
In January 2014, two trains were stranded at Barmouth after severe winter storms destroyed the sea wall at nearby Llanaber.
Tommy Nutter (17th. April 1943 – 17th. August 1992) was born in Barmouth. He was a British tailor, famous for re-inventing the Savile Row suit in the 1960's.
The walls of Tre'r Ceiri /
In his excellent book A History of Wales, John Davies writes: "Gwynedd has one of the most remarkable prehistoric sites in Britain - the settlement of Tre'r Ceiri on the slopes of Yr Eifl. It is surrounded by a stone wall which in places is still as much as four metres in height, and within the walls are the ruins of about a hundred and fifty stone huts. There is evidence that the village was occupied in the Roman period, but it appears that its beginnings below to the years around 200 BC. The huts, with their thick walls and turf roofs, were not doubt quite snug, but it is reasonable to assume - as Tre'r Ceiri is over 400 metres above sea level - that the huts were the summer habitation of summer shepherds whose winter dwellings in the lowlands have long since been obliterated."
Yn ei lyfr gwych Hanes Cymru, mae John Davies yn ysgrifennu: "Ceir clogwyn-gestyll ar arfordir gorllewin Gwynedd hefyd. Yno yn ogystal y mae un o safleoedd cynhanesyddol hynotaf Prydain, sef Tre'r Ceiri ar lechweddau'r Eifl. Fe'i hamgylchynir gan fur o gerrig sydd mewn mannau yn dal i fod gymaint a phedwar metr o uchder, ac o fewn ei muriau y mae cant a hanner o gytiau crwn. Cafwyd tystiolaeth am ddefnyddio'r pentref yn y cyfnod Rhufeinig ond ymddengys fod dechreuadau'r gaer yn perthyn i'r blynyddoedd o gwmpas 200 CC. Diau fod y cytiau yn eithaf clyd gyda'u muriau cerrig trwchus a'u toeau tywyrch, ond mae rhesymol yw credu - a'r pentref wedi leoli 400 metr uwchlaw'r mor - mai cartref i fugeiliaid haf ydoedd a bod eu hendrefi ar y gwastadeddau wedi'u dileu gan weithgarwch amaethyddol y canrifoedd."
From Tre'r Ceiri /
In his excellent book A History of Wales, John Davies writes: "Gwynedd has one of the most remarkable prehistoric sites in Britain - the settlement of Tre'r Ceiri on the slopes of Yr Eifl. It is surrounded by a stone wall which in places is still as much as four metres in height, and within the walls are the ruins of about a hundred and fifty stone huts. There is evidence that the village was occupied in the Roman period, but it appears that its beginnings below to the years around 200 BC. The huts, with their thick walls and turf roofs, were not doubt quite snug, but it is reasonable to assume - as Tre'r Ceiri is over 400 metres above sea level - that the huts were the summer habitation of summer shepherds whose winter dwellings in the lowlands have long since been obliterated."
Yn ei lyfr gwych Hanes Cymru, mae John Davies yn ysgrifennu: "Ceir clogwyn-gestyll ar arfordir gorllewin Gwynedd hefyd. Yno yn ogystal y mae un o safleoedd cynhanesyddol hynotaf Prydain, sef Tre'r Ceiri ar lechweddau'r Eifl. Fe'i hamgylchynir gan fur o gerrig sydd mewn mannau yn dal i fod gymaint a phedwar metr o uchder, ac o fewn ei muriau y mae cant a hanner o gytiau crwn. Cafwyd tystiolaeth am ddefnyddio'r pentref yn y cyfnod Rhufeinig ond ymddengys fod dechreuadau'r gaer yn perthyn i'r blynyddoedd o gwmpas 200 CC. Diau fod y cytiau yn eithaf clyd gyda'u muriau cerrig trwchus a'u toeau tywyrch, ond mae rhesymol yw credu - a'r pentref wedi leoli 400 metr uwchlaw'r mor - mai cartref i fugeiliaid haf ydoedd a bod eu hendrefi ar y gwastadeddau wedi'u dileu gan weithgarwch amaethyddol y canrifoedd."
From Tre'r Ceiri /
In his excellent book A History of Wales, John Davies writes: "Gwynedd has one of the most remarkable prehistoric sites in Britain - the settlement of Tre'r Ceiri on the slopes of Yr Eifl. It is surrounded by a stone wall which in places is still as much as four metres in height, and within the walls are the ruins of about a hundred and fifty stone huts. There is evidence that the village was occupied in the Roman period, but it appears that its beginnings below to the years around 200 BC. The huts, with their thick walls and turf roofs, were not doubt quite snug, but it is reasonable to assume - as Tre'r Ceiri is over 400 metres above sea level - that the huts were the summer habitation of summer shepherds whose winter dwellings in the lowlands have long since been obliterated."
Yn ei lyfr gwych Hanes Cymru, mae John Davies yn ysgrifennu: "Ceir clogwyn-gestyll ar arfordir gorllewin Gwynedd hefyd. Yno yn ogystal y mae un o safleoedd cynhanesyddol hynotaf Prydain, sef Tre'r Ceiri ar lechweddau'r Eifl. Fe'i hamgylchynir gan fur o gerrig sydd mewn mannau yn dal i fod gymaint a phedwar metr o uchder, ac o fewn ei muriau y mae cant a hanner o gytiau crwn. Cafwyd tystiolaeth am ddefnyddio'r pentref yn y cyfnod Rhufeinig ond ymddengys fod dechreuadau'r gaer yn perthyn i'r blynyddoedd o gwmpas 200 CC. Diau fod y cytiau yn eithaf clyd gyda'u muriau cerrig trwchus a'u toeau tywyrch, ond mae rhesymol yw credu - a'r pentref wedi leoli 400 metr uwchlaw'r mor - mai cartref i fugeiliaid haf ydoedd a bod eu hendrefi ar y gwastadeddau wedi'u dileu gan weithgarwch amaethyddol y canrifoedd."
WIND Chicago radio host Amy Jacobson MC ed an event in Des Plaines for Crwn, also called crown which stands for Chicago Republican Women's Network. They have developed a large group in the Chicago area showing there is no war on women from the Republicans Party but perhaps the democrats are waging the war on women.
The main entrance into Tre'r Ceiri /
In his excellent book A History of Wales, John Davies writes: "Gwynedd has one of the most remarkable prehistoric sites in Britain - the settlement of Tre'r Ceiri on the slopes of Yr Eifl. It is surrounded by a stone wall which in places is still as much as four metres in height, and within the walls are the ruins of about a hundred and fifty stone huts. There is evidence that the village was occupied in the Roman period, but it appears that its beginnings below to the years around 200 BC. The huts, with their thick walls and turf roofs, were not doubt quite snug, but it is reasonable to assume - as Tre'r Ceiri is over 400 metres above sea level - that the huts were the summer habitation of summer shepherds whose winter dwellings in the lowlands have long since been obliterated."
Yn ei lyfr gwych Hanes Cymru, mae John Davies yn ysgrifennu: "Ceir clogwyn-gestyll ar arfordir gorllewin Gwynedd hefyd. Yno yn ogystal y mae un o safleoedd cynhanesyddol hynotaf Prydain, sef Tre'r Ceiri ar lechweddau'r Eifl. Fe'i hamgylchynir gan fur o gerrig sydd mewn mannau yn dal i fod gymaint a phedwar metr o uchder, ac o fewn ei muriau y mae cant a hanner o gytiau crwn. Cafwyd tystiolaeth am ddefnyddio'r pentref yn y cyfnod Rhufeinig ond ymddengys fod dechreuadau'r gaer yn perthyn i'r blynyddoedd o gwmpas 200 CC. Diau fod y cytiau yn eithaf clyd gyda'u muriau cerrig trwchus a'u toeau tywyrch, ond mae rhesymol yw credu - a'r pentref wedi leoli 400 metr uwchlaw'r mor - mai cartref i fugeiliaid haf ydoedd a bod eu hendrefi ar y gwastadeddau wedi'u dileu gan weithgarwch amaethyddol y canrifoedd."
Tŷ bach cyhoeddus crwn unigryw ym Mhorth Penrhyn / unique ten seater circular toilet in Port Penrhyn
Mawn ar draeth Amroth. Mae brigau coed i'w gweld yn y mawn. Y gragen dyllu sydd wedi creu'r tyllau crwn, mae'r tyllau wedi llenwi a thywod.
Rhwng 7 ac 12 mil o flynyddoedd yn y gorffennol roedd y môr yn is nac y mae heddiw. Wrth i oes yr iâ ddod i ben, fe gododd y môr i orchuddio'r iseldir... ac mae'r cynefin a fu, sef coedwig, i'w gweld yn aml ar arfordir Cymru ar lanw isel. Hadyn o wir i chwedlau Cantre’ Gwaelod.
Peat on the shore at Amroth. Tree branches can be seen in the peat. The holes, filled with sand, were made by the piddock shell, Pholas dactylus.
Peat and submerged forests can be seen on many beaches in Wales. Between 12 and 7 thousand years ago sea level rose as the last ice age ended... This is referred to in Welsh mythology, the legend of Cantre Gwaelod.