Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Snake Island is an island of Lagos, located opposite Tin Can Island Port and Apapa. Named because of its snake-like topography, the island is about 14 km in length and 1.4 km wide. Compared to the rest of Lagos, it is less developed and mainly accessible by water transport. A bridge has been proposed for future development.
The inaugural edition leveraged on Nigeria's 50 years of Independence and was curated by Azu Nwagbogu, Caline Chagoury and Marc Prust. Participating photographers were required to have worked in Lagos, Nigeria or in Africa shooting works that interpreted the theme ‘No Judgement: Africa Under the Prism’. [6]
Venomous species occurring in Nigeria are in the families Viperidae, Elapidae, and Atractaspidinae. [2] Viperidae include the carpet viper, the puff adder, the Gaboon viper, and the night adder. They are characterised by their heavily built muscular bodies with black patches for camouflage.
Okoya is a Yoruba man from the southwestern part of Nigeria. He was born into the family of Tiamiyu Ayinde Okoya in Lagos. He attended Ansar-Un-Deen primary school in Oke Popo, his only formal schooling. He worked in his father's tailoring business, which also included the sale of tailoring accessories. [8]
vegetation at jaekel house, lagos state tourists in jaekel house garden at jaekel house. The Jaekel House is a 2-storey colonial mansion in Ebute Metta, Lagos, Nigeria.The house was built in 1898 on a large expanse of landscaped land and named after the late Francis Jaekel OBE, a former superintendent of the Nigerian Railway Corporation who retired in the 1970s after almost three decades of ...
Nigeria portal Subcategories. This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total. ... Pages in category "People from Lagos" The following 116 pages are ...
Bar Beach was a beach on the Atlantic Ocean along the shoreline of Lagos, situated on Victoria Island. [1] [2] For a time, it was the most popular beach in Nigeria [3] [4] especially when Lagos was the capital of the country. [5]
Azu Nwagbogu (born 1975) is a Nigerian art curator and National Geographic Explorer at Large. [1] [2] He is the Founder and Director of the African Artists' Foundation, the LagosPhoto Festival and creator of Art Base Africa, an emerging virtual space dedicated to exploring and understanding contemporary African art and diaspora. [3]