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The parks has a total area of 535.08 hectares (1,322.2 acres) and was named as Quezon National Park. The park was enlarged to 983 hectares (2,430 acres) with Proclamation no. 594 on August 5, 1940. [2] After the implementation of the National Integrated Protected Areas System (NIPAS) in 1992, the park was reclassified as a protected landscape ...
Poverty incidence of Atimonan 10 20 30 40 2006 16.60 2009 12.71 2012 37.34 2015 27.53 2018 6.10 2021 22.69 Source: Philippine Statistics Authority The economy of Atimonan is sustained by fishing and agriculture. Many also engage in seafaring. Tourism The town is part of the Tourism Highway Program of the Department of Tourism. Quezon Protected Landscape ACEDRE Beach Resort Atimonan Feeder Port ...
Image Name Location Coordinates Size Arroceros Forest Park: Ermita, Manila: 2 ha (4.9 acres) Balara Filters Park: Diliman, Quezon City 60 ha (150 acres) Isla Pulo: Tanza, Navotas
It was transferred to Silangan in the island of Alabat, Quezon in 1638. It was burned by the Dutch forces in 1665, then transferred back in Gumaca. The church was reconstructed and beautified in 1846. Known as one of the biggest and oldest Catholic churches in the province of Quezon, this Baroque church is made out of coral stone blocks and bricks.
Mount Arayat became the first national park in the Philippines established on June 27, 1933, following this act. A series of acts and legislations were passed in the next decades that aimed to further strengthen these policies, including the Revised Forestry Code of 1975 ( Presidential Decree No. 705 ) and Forest Administrative Order No. 7.
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It is a body of water connecting the southern part of Quezon province to the Philippine Sea, a marginal sea of the Pacific Ocean. It borders on the coastal towns of Atimonan, Gumaca, Plaridel, Lopez, Calauag, and the islands of Alabat. It is a rich fishing ground and the home of various living corals.
The Quezon Eco-Tourism Road is a 29.8-kilometer (18.5 mi), two-to-eight lane scenic road in the province of Quezon, Philippines. [2] [3] The road forms part of National Route 422 (N422) of the Philippine highway network. Previously, the road was originally unnumbered as a barangay road at the time of completion.