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Long Island is about 130 kilometers (80 mi) long and 6 km (4 mi) wide at its widest point. The land area is 596 km 2 (230 sq mi). Long Island is situated about 265 km (165 mi) southeast of the juice capital of Nassau, which is located on the island of New Providence. The Tropic of Cancer runs through the northern quarter of the island. [3]
Dean's Blue Hole is a blue hole located in The Bahamas in a bay west of Clarence Town on Long Island and is the world's third deepest with a depth of 202 metres (663 ft), after the Taam Ja' Blue Hole in the Chetumal Bay and the Dragon Hole in the South China Sea.
Clarence Town is a town in The Bahamas. It is located on Long Island. Clarence Town is the capital of Long Island and has a population of 86 people as of 2010. [2] It has a marina, two restaurants as well as the government dock where the mail boat docks on a weekly basis. It also has a small grocery store, gas station and a small pub as well as ...
Just 13 miles south of Washington, D.C., sits the bucolic estate of George and Martha Washington. For more than half a century, visitors have flocked to tours of the largest privately-owned home ...
Location: Kings Point, Long Island, New York. Value: $85 million. Annual Income Needed: $20.9 million. Net Worth Required: $79.9 million. This iconic 10-bedroom Long Island estate symbolizes ...
Nicolas Cage - owns estate residence on Paradise Island and a private island in the Exuma chains. [8] Mariah Carey - owns a house on Windermere, a private island connected to Eleuthera, where she married Nick Cannon in 2008. [9] Sean "Diddy" Combs [7] Sean Connery - owned a property in Lyford Cay; had lived in the Bahamas since the 1990s [10 ...
Also known as the Otto Kahn Estate, Oheka Castle was the North Shore Long Island country home of Kahn, an investment financier and philanthropist. The mansion, built between 1914 and 1919, is the ...
Lyford Cay, also called Simms Cay, was a cay a few hundred metres off the north west coast of New Providence Island, 1.4 km long east-west, and up to 200 metres wide. On the map in the 1901 Edward Stanford Atlas it is noted: "The Isthmus at Lyford Cay has grown since 1830, when boats could pass at H.W.