North Berwick Law
North Berwick Law, sometimes abbreviated to Berwick Law, is a conical hill which rises conspicuously from the surrounding landscape. It overlooks the East Lothian town of North Berwick, Scotland, and stands at 613 ft above sea level.
It is considerably steeper on its north side.
Geology
Geologically, the law is a volcanic plug of hard phonolitic trachyte rock of Carboniferous age. It has survived the scraping glaciers of the ice age. It is a crag and tail with a prominent tail extending eastwards.History
The summit bears remnants of an Iron Age [hill fort], and the ruins of later military buildings that were once used by lookouts in both the Napoleonic Wars, and in World War II.Since 1709 the law has been topped with a whale's jawbone. The bone was replaced three times until being removed, due to safety concerns, in 2005. On 26 June 2008, a fibreglass replica whale bone, the same size as the one that was removed in 2005, was airlifted into place to give North Berwick Law back its landmark. The funding for the replica was donated by an anonymous friend of North Berwick.