Holyrood will be handed a raft of new powers after the Scotland Bill was agreed by the House of Commons for the final time on Wednesday.

The Bill will hand Scotland powers over income tax, air passenger duty, abortion law, the Crown Estate and benefits.

It also sets in stone the permanence of the Scottish Parliament, requiring a referendum to abolish it.

Scottish secretary David Mundell, the nation's sole Conservative MP, described the passage of the Bill as a "truly significant day".

But SNP MPs warned that in future they do not want to be "given crumbs from the table at Westminster".

Mr Mundell said: "It provides even greater opportunities for the Scottish Government to tailor and deliver Scottish solutions to Scottish issues. The Scottish Parliament that returns in May will be a powerhouse parliament that has come of age."

But Angus MacNeil, the SNP MP for Na h-Eileanan an Iar, criticised the approach to devolution taken by the Tory Government.

He said: "Isn't it time that we moved away from the devolution that is effectively crumbs from the table from Westminster and moved to a model that Copenhagen shares with the Faroe Islands and Greenland: The larder is open, you choose your own powers.

"No longer should we be given crumbs from the table at Westminster but the Scottish Government takes the powers the Scottish Government wants from Westminster when it wants."

Mr Mundell said Mr MacNeil had struck a "rather sour note," and claimed that the Bill delivers the recommendations set out by the post-referendum Smith Commission on further devolution.

SNP Westminster group leader Angus Robertson said the Bill is "progress", but he insisted there is still further to go as he suggested people who voted for Scottish independence had brought about the devolution of more powers.

"Thanks to all of those Yes voters, thanks to all of those SNP voters, Westminster has had to take note," he said.

"This is just the latest stage on Scotland's journey. There will be many more."

The Scotland Bill cleared its final Commons vote unopposed and will become law once it has received royal assent.