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Ireland's Eye: Dublin 40.34 IE0002193: Knocksink Wood: Dublin, Wicklow 87.89 IE0000725: Lambay Island: Dublin 404.19 IE0000204: Malahide Estuary: Dublin 788 IE0000205: Rogerstown Estuary: Dublin 537.76 IE0000208: Ballynafagh Bog: Kildare 155.23 IE0000391: Ballynafagh Lake: Ballynafagh Lake, County Kildare: Kildare 45.49 IE0001387: Red Bog ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "Maps of Ireland" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
Ireland ratified the convention on 16 September 1991. [3] As of 2025, Ireland has two sites on the list, and a further three on the tentative list. [3] The first site listed was Brú na Bóinne – Archaeological Ensemble of the Bend of the Boyne, in 1993. The second site, Sceilg Mhichíl, was listed in 1996.
The chart below shows the national parks in Ireland. The first park established in Ireland was Killarney National Park located in County Kerry in 1932. Since then a further 7 national parks have been opened; the most recent being Páirc Náisiúnta na Mara in County Kerry , the first marine national park and the largest in the state [ 1 ]
The first scientific descriptions of the animal's remains were made by Irish physician Thomas Molyneux in 1695, who identified large antlers from Dardistown—which were apparently commonly unearthed in Ireland—as belonging to the elk (known as the moose in North America), concluding that it was once abundant on the island. [9]
There are 27 mammal species native to Ireland or naturalised in both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland before 1500. The Red List of Irish terrestrial mammals was updated in 2019, with assessments of these 27 species. One species is locally extinct, one is vulnerable and 25 are least concern species. Not assessed were nine mammal ...
Mountjoy House, the headquarters of Ordnance Survey Ireland, in the Phoenix Park, Dublin. Thomas Colby, the long-serving Director-General of the Ordnance Survey in Great Britain, was the first to suggest that the Ordnance Survey be used to map Ireland. A highly detailed survey of the whole of Ireland would be extremely useful for the British ...
Saint John's Point or St. John's Point (Irish: Rinn Eoin) [1] is a cape at the southern tip of the Lecale peninsula of County Down, Northern Ireland, separating Dundrum Bay from Killough Harbour, which forms its northern extremity.