Scots on holiday in Las Vegas during a mass shooting that left 59 people dead have relived their experiences of that night.

People fled down the city's famous strip as gunman Stephen Paddock opened fire from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Hotel.

He targeted a nearby open air country music festival, where more than 500 people were injured.

Speaking at Glasgow Airport on Tuesday, Scots arriving home on the first flight from Las Vegas since the attack described scenes of fear and confusion.

Annie Macfarlane from Glasgow watched from her room as terrified concertgoers fled the hail of bullets.

"I heard the shots but your brain just goes 'that can't be gunfire, it must be fireworks, it must be the end of the concert'.

"Then suddenly everybody started running and coming over the wall into our resort complex and bashing at the doors."

Kenny Wilson was locked in an Irish bar in the New York-New York casino a short distance from Mandalay Bay, from where the shooter took aim at the crowd.

Mr Wilson, who was in Las Vegas for a wedding, said: "They locked everything up and told us to stay in. The next thing they said everybody had to evacuate New York-New York.

"We didn't get back to our room until 4am this morning. We saw a lot of ambulances and there were bodies."

One woman described running along the Las Vegas strip seeking refuge after hearing rumours there were multiple gunmen on the loose.

"We were jumping over counters, into kitchens, running into shopping malls," she said.

"They were shutting all the shops, we were wondering where to hide and standing behind pillars thinking gunmen were below us. It was horrible."

One Scot staying at the Mandalay Bay said it was "surreal" watching coverage of the attack.

"It was quite surreal watching video cameras filming your own complex while you're within it," he said.

"It seems as if you're back home watching it."

US authorities have been unable to establish a motive for the attack but Las Vegas sheriff Joe Lombardo described it as a "lone wolf" incident.

Police found 23 guns in Paddock's hotel room and more than a dozen firearms and thousands of rounds of ammunition at his Nevada home, as well as explosives.