IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
Dumbarton Road, GLASGOW, G60 5BB

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to Dumbarton Road, G60 5BB by members of the Geograph project.

The Geograph project started in 2005 with the aim of publishing, organising and preserving representative images for every square kilometre of Great Britain, Ireland and the Isle of Man.

There are currently over 7.5m images from over14,400 individuals and you can help contribute to the project by visiting https://www.geograph.org.uk

Image Map


Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
Notes
  • Clicking on the map will re-center to the selected point.
  • The higher the marker number, the further away the image location is from the centre of the postcode.

Image Listing (118 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
Houses on Dumbarton Road
Image: © Richard Sutcliffe Taken: 1 Sep 2023
0.02 miles
2
Heading through Bowling in West Dunbartonshire
The building with the scaffolding is a former inn which is being repaired, maybe reopening?
Image: © James Denham Taken: 24 Nov 2013
0.03 miles
3
National Cycle Network Route 7
Eastern portal of the short tunnel on the former Lanarkshire & Dunbartonshire Railway line through Bowling. The path leads from the SECC at Glasgow to Loch Lomond. See also Image
Image: © Thomas Nugent Taken: 2 Mar 2008
0.03 miles
4
Bowling tunnel
Date stone on the eastern portal of the tunnel on the former Lanarkshire & Dunbartonshire Railway line at Bowling. Now part of the National Cycle Network.
Image: © Thomas Nugent Taken: 2 Mar 2008
0.03 miles
5
Bowling level crossing
Slightly west of Bowling station. Now locked from public use, it once led to the Scott of Bowling shipyard.
Image: © Thomas Nugent Taken: 2 Mar 2008
0.03 miles
6
The Little Mill, Bowling
Image: © william craig Taken: 16 May 2005
0.03 miles
7
National Cycle Network Route 7 at Bowling
The former Lanarkshire and Dunbartonshire Railway line passes through a cutting in the bedrock above Bowling village.
Image: © Thomas Nugent Taken: 27 Apr 2015
0.03 miles
8
Rhizomorphs (thick fungal threads) of Armillaria species
These tough black threads are covering a piece of fallen wood; formerly, this "Honey Fungus" would have been identified as Armillaria mellea, but it is now known that the fungi that look rather like this belong to any of a number of quite distinct species. This particular example was photographed alongside the cycle path between Dumbarton and Bowling, where the path is confined between steep stone walls (the course of an old railway line); the photo was taken not far to the west of the tunnel shown in Image Though we tend to notice the larger structures (mushrooms and brackets), a fungus largely consists of cottonwool-like threads (called hyphae) that spread inconspicuously through the ground, wood, or whatever the fungus is growing on. This photo shows a different kind of structure, rhizomorphs (Honey Fungus is also sometimes known as Bootlace Fungus; the picture shows why this is quite fitting). The rhizomorphs not only allow the fungus to physically spread, but they also serve as supply lines (in the following quotation, "basidiocarps" are mushrooms): "Clumps of basidiocarps of Armillaria mellea, the honey fungus, are common on and around dead tree stumps in the autumn. The stump or the dead trunk and roots are the operational saprotrophic base for the parasite to act. Black, water-proof, root-like rhizomorphs grow out, ten metres or more, from the base until they make contact with the roots or trunk base of another living tree. These rhizomorphs are aggregates of several thousand hyphae. Specialized hyphae within conduct nutrients from the colonized food base to the new victim. These nutrients provide a massive resource to enable the fungus to overcome the physical and chemical barrier of the bark and become established within" [Ingold & Hudson, "The Biology of Fungi", p162-4]. After penetrating the bark of their new victim, the threads spread beneath the bark, eventually merging into a solid black mat that encircles the inner wood of the tree (in places where bark has fallen from a tree, this mat can sometimes be seen); the rhizomorphs then send out hyphae (much smaller threads) to degrade the wood of the tree. Armillaria mellea causes an intensive white rot, and is one of the most dangerous parasites of trees, causing the loss of a great deal of timber.
Image: © Lairich Rig Taken: 14 Feb 2007
0.04 miles
9
Houses, Dumbarton Road
The properties are set back from the road.
Image: © Richard Sutcliffe Taken: 1 Sep 2023
0.04 miles
10
A82, Great Western Road, at Bowling
Image: © David Dixon Taken: 26 Sep 2019
0.04 miles
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