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  2. Golfo Dulce, Costa Rica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golfo_Dulce,_Costa_Rica

    Golfo Dulce (English: Sweet Gulf) is a gulf in Costa Rica, located at the south of the Province of Puntarenas. The inlet starts on the Pacific Ocean side of Costa Rica and extends slightly northward before turning west. The most westward part is at the city of Rincon. The bay separates the Osa Peninsula from the mainland Costa Rica. [1]

  3. Blue coral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_coral

    The blue coral is the only extant octocoral with a massive skeleton, [3] which is composed of fibrocrystalline aragonite (calcium carbonate). It is a hermatypic zooxanthellaete species with either blue or green-grey polyps located within its skeleton, with each containing eight tentacles. Its colonies are either columnar, plate like or branched.

  4. Malpais, Costa Rica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malpais,_Costa_Rica

    Malpais (9°36'03 N, 85°08'36 W) is a town in Puntarenas Province, Costa Rica which began as a fishing and cattle-farming village, and has become popular among surfers and adventure travelers around the world. in 2006, Forbes Magazine voted the beaches of Malpais and neighboring Santa Teresa as "One of the ten most beautiful in the world."

  5. Piedras Blancas National Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piedras_Blancas_National_Park

    It is found in the Puntarenas Province of southern Costa Rica near the town of La Gamba. It protects rainforests and beaches near the Golfo Dulce on the Pacific Coast. It used to operate as part of the Corcovado National Park called the Esquinas Sector from 1991 before becoming a separate park in 1999. Until the mid-1990s, much of the forest in ...

  6. Cahuita National Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cahuita_National_Park

    February through April typically have the best underwater visibility. This is also one of the nicest and least developed beaches in Costa Rica. [2] The 600-acre (242-ha) reef is known to have at least 35 species of coral, 140 species of molluscs, 44 species of crustaceans, and 123 species of fish. The outer reef is about 4 km long. [3]

  7. Ecotourism in Costa Rica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecotourism_in_Costa_Rica

    Crab-eating raccoon wandering on a beach resort from the nearby Las Baulas National Marine Park. Costa Rica has turned to ecotourism as its key to economic development. [3] Since 1984, international tourism receipts have grown from $117 million to $136 million in 1987, and $577 million in 1993.

  8. List of islands of Costa Rica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_islands_of_Costa_Rica

    This is a list of islands of Costa Rica. There are about 79 islands in Costa Rica. [1] Islands. The islands of Costa Rica include the following: [1] [2]

  9. Puntarenas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puntarenas

    The name Puntarenas comes from a portmanteau of punta and arenas, which means "point" and "sands", respectively.In English this would translate roughly to "Sand Point". The name is first referenced by the arrival in February 1720 of the pirate John Clipperton to the area, which recorded in his journals to have arrived to a "Punta de Arena", referring to the needle-like area on which the city ...