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Playa Azul (en: Blue Beach) is a beachside town in the Mexican state of Michoacán. The city lives from tourism and fishing. It is the southern terminus of Federal Highway 37, which connects it with the state of San Luis Potosí. [2] The town was the epicentre of the Playa Azul earthquake, a magnitude M w 7.2 (M s 7.3) quake that struck on 24 ...
Cueva Ambrosio, discovered in the 1960s has Indian drawings along with 47 pre-Columbian symbols that are more than 3,000 years old. Cueva de los Musulmanes (Cave of Muslims) is located on a second trail. It was once used as an indigenous tomb. [4] [14] Playa de Varadero (Varadero Beach). Cueva de Ambrosio (Ambrosio Cave).
Endorheic basin, also known as a sink, alkali flat or sabkha, a desert basin with no outlet which periodically fills with water to form a temporary lake Dry lake , often called a playa in the southwestern United States
Playa Azul (Benidorm), one of the tallest buildings in Spain; Playa Azul, a Mexican film that won Best Original Score at the 34th Ariel Awards "Playa Azul", a song by Los Amigos Invisibles from the 2002 album The Venezuelan Zinga Son, Vol. 1
Laguna Azul (Spanish for "blue lake" or blue lagoon") may refer to: Laguna Azul (Bolivia) , a lake in Bolivia Laguna Azul , the local name for Lake Sauce in Peru
Lake Sauce [1] [2] [3] also locally known as Laguna Azul (Spanish for "blue lake"), is a lake in Peru. [1] [2] It is located in the region of San Martin, 45 km from the city of Tarapoto, [2] at 700 m of elevation and has an area of 4.3 km 2. [1] The lake is surrounded by hotels, [2] [4] camping facilities, [4] forest remnants and agricultural ...
It is a spring-fed lake. [2] [3] The lake was named for Indians who once settled there. [4] There are approximately 220 homes on the lake, of which a third are on leased land. On the west side is Indian Lake Hills Golf Course, with 3 nine-hole courses: East, West and North. On the east end there is Indian Yacht Club, with a well-maintained boat ...
Early settlers found a group of small lakes and wetlands, occupying about 640 acres (2.6 km 2), and named them for the Indian tribes living in the region.The area was ideal for fishing and hunting, but in the 1850s it was converted into the 6,334-acre (25.63 km 2) "Lewistown Reservoir," in order to collect water for the Sidney Feeder to the Miami and Erie Canal, which extended from Toledo to ...