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Runaway Bay is a town in Saint Ann Parish on the northern coast of Jamaica and is considered one of the most naturally beautiful places on the island. It is a notable tourist destination located 16 km (9.9 mi) west of Ocho Rios, [1] and slightly east of Discovery Bay, where Christopher Columbus landed in 1494.
Jacobs Well is bounded to the north by Steiglitz, to the east by Moreton Bay, to the south by the Pimpama River and to the west by Norwell. Calypso Bay is a canal estate at the south-east end of Jacobs Well ( 27°47′38″S 153°22′30″E / 27.7940°S 153.3750°E / -27.7940; 153.3750 ( Calypso Bay canal estate ) ), built on a ...
A bay is a body of water forming an indentation along the shoreline of a landmass, larger than a cove (i.e. Jade Cove) but smaller than a gulf (i.e. The Gulf or The Gulf of Mexico) Cagway Bay; Orange Bay (Hanover Parish) Orange Bay (Portland Parish) Xtabi; The following are bays in Jamaica: Buff Bay; i Montego Bay; i Discovery Bay; i Morant Bay
Runaway Bay may refer to: Runaway Bay, Jamaica; Runaway Bay, Queensland, Australia, a suburb of Gold Coast City; Runaway Bay, Texas, United States; Runaway Bay, children's television series; Runaway Bay, ship
Runaway Bay is a coastal suburb in the City of Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia. [2] In the 2021 census, Runaway Bay had a population of 9,308 people. [1] The neighbourhood of Anglers Paradise) is situated within Runaway Bay. [3]
Port Royal Cays on a map of 1774 The Port Royal Cays are a small group of uninhabited islands or cays off Port Royal , Jamaica , located at 17°55′06.36″N 76°49′11.96″W / 17.9184333°N 76.8199889°W / 17.9184333; -76.8199889 and arranged in the shape of an atoll with a diameter between 4 and 5 km, and a total area of 12
A set of searchable maps, available online to the public, zooms in on Alameda, Marin, San Francisco and San Mateo counties — the first of many jurisdictions that researchers hope will undergo ...
The suburb takes its name from Coombabah Lake and Coombabah Creek, which in turn are named using Bundjalung language, Ngaraangbal dialect words meaning place of the wood grubs, from the word goombo meaning teredo worm, which was a deliberately cultivated food source by the Indigenous people.