- of some
nouns is plural, and the
singular form is
formed from it, e.g.,
llygod, mice -> llygoden, mouse; erfin,
turnips -> erfinen, turnip. In many languages...
-
meaning "the mice" and
which is
contained in the
Breton word logod, the
Welsh llygod "mice", and the
Irish luch,
genitive luchad "mouse".
Traces of Neolithic...
-
Gwendraeth River, near the Town of Kidwely, to the
Great Forest and Pwll
Llygod in the
County of Carmarthen. Kent and Sus****
Roads Act 1766 6 Geo. 3. c...
- Carmarthenshire. When
Thomas Kymer built his
canal to
carry coal from pits at Pwll y
Llygod on the
banks of the
Gwendraeth Fawr to
Ythyn Frenig,
about half a mile to...
-
Railway Carway tramroad c.1770
Carway coal pits to Kymer's
Canal at Pwll y
Llygod for
connection to
Kidwelly Quay
Llanelly Railway 1833 St David's Colliery...
-
Trannon Syncline Wales E&W 164
Tregibby Anticline Wales E&W 193 Tre-pys-
llygod Syncline Clwyd Wales Mem E&W 95/107
Trimdon Anticline Durham England BGS:BRG...
- 1766 to
carry coal via a
tramroad over the
River Gwendraeth Fawr at Pwll-y-
Llygod, and 3
miles of
canal to
Kidwelly harbour.
Later extended and then in 1873...
- ships. It
began life as Kymer's
Canal in 1766,
which linked pits at Pwll y
Llygod to a dock near Kidwelly.
Access to the dock
gradually became more difficult...
-
coast was the problem.
About 1768
Thomas Kymer had
built a
canal to Pwll-y-
Llygod, and a
waggonway was
constructed from the head of the
canal there to pits...
-
between 1766 and 1768 in
order to
carry coal from pits and
levels at Pwll y
Llygod and
Great Forest (near Carway) to a
place of
shipment on the
Lesser Gwendraeth...