1.Kujūkuri Beach ・Chiba Prefecture, Japan | ||||||
Kujūkuri Beach (九十九里浜, Kujūkuri-hama) is a sandy beach that occupies much of the northeast coast of the Bōsō Peninsula in Chiba Prefecture, Japan.[1][2] The beach is approximately 60 kilometres (37 mi) long, making it the second longest beach in Japan.[citation needed] Kujūkuri Beach is a popular swimming and surfing destination for inhabitants of Greater Tokyo.[3][4] The beach is protected as part of Kujūkuri Prefectural Natural Park.[1] | ||||||
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2.Inba Tega Prefectural Natural Park ・Chiba Prefecture, Japan | ||||||
Inba Tega Prefectural Natural Park (県立印旛手賀自然公園, Kenritsu Inba Tega shizen kōen) is a Prefectural Natural Park in northern Chiba Prefecture, Japan. First designated for protection in 1952, the park's central features are Inba Marsh (印旛沼) and Tega Marsh (手賀沼). The park spans the borders of seven municipalities: Abiko, Inzai, Kashiwa, Narita, Sakae, Sakura, and Shisui. The marshes provide an important wetland habitat for wild birds.[1][2] | ||||||
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3.Ōtone Prefectural Natural Park ・Chiba Prefecture, Japan | ||||||
Ōtone Prefectural Natural Park (県立大利根自然公園, Kenritsu Ōtone shizen kōen) is a Prefectural Natural Park in northern Chiba Prefecture, Japan. First designated for protection in 1935, the park's central feature is the Tone River. The park spans the municipalities of Katori and Kōzaki.[1][2] The giant camphor trees at Kōzaki Jinja (神崎神社) are a Natural Monument.[2][3] | ||||||
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4.Kasamori Tsurumai Prefectural Natural Park ・Chiba Prefecture, Japan | ||||||
Kasamori Tsurumai Prefectural Natural Park (県立笠森鶴舞自然公園, Kenritsu Kasamori Tsurumai shizen kōen) is a Prefectural Natural Park in central Chiba Prefecture, Japan. Established in 1966, the park spans the municipalities of Chōnan, Ichihara, and Nagara.[1][2] Kasamori-dera is on the Bandō 33 Kannon pilgrimage route; its Kannon Hall is an Important Cultural Property dating to 1597 and related woodlands are a Natural Monument.[2][3][4] | ||||||
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5.Kujūkuri Prefectural Natural Park ・Chiba Prefecture, Japan | ||||||
Kujūkuri Prefectural Natural Park (県立九十九里自然公園, Kenritsu Kujūkuri shizen kōen) is a Prefectural Natural Park in Chiba Prefecture, Japan. First designated for protection in 1935, the park extends along some sixty kilometres of the coast between the Minami Bōsō and Suigo-Tsukuba Quasi-National Parks. The park spans the borders of twelve municipalities: Asahi, Chiba, Chōsei, Chōshi, Ichinomiya, Kujūkuri, Ōamishirasato, Sanmu, Shirako, Sōsa, Tōgane, and Yokoshibahikari.[1][2] | ||||||
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6.Takagoyama Prefectural Natural Park ・Chiba Prefecture, Japan | ||||||
Takagoyama Prefectural Natural Park (県立高宕山自然公園, Kenritsu Takagoyama shizen kōen) is a Prefectural Natural Park in south-central Chiba Prefecture, Japan. First designated for protection in 1935, the park's central feature is Mount Takago (高宕山). The park spans the municipalities of Futtsu and Kimitsu.[1][2] In 1956 the habitat the mountain provides for the Japanese macaque was designated a Natural Monument.[2][3] | ||||||
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7.Mineokasankei Prefectural Natural Park ・Chiba Prefecture, Japan | ||||||
Mineokasankei Prefectural Natural Park (県立嶺岡山系自然公園, Kenritsu Mineokasankei shizen kōen) is a Prefectural Natural Park in southern Chiba Prefecture, Japan. First designated for protection in 1935, the park's central features are the Mineoka Mountains. The park spans the municipalities of Kamogawa and Minamibōsō.[1][2] | ||||||
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8.Yōrō Keikoku Okukiyosumi Prefectural Natural Park ・Chiba Prefecture, Japan | ||||||
Yōrō Keikoku Okukiyosumi Prefectural Natural Park (県立養老渓谷奥清澄自然公園, Kenritsu Yōrō Keikoku Okukiyosumi shizen kōen) is a Prefectural Natural Park in southern Chiba Prefecture, Japan. First designated for protection in 1935, the park's central features are the Yōrō Valley (養老渓谷) and Kiyosumi Mountains (清澄山地). The park spans the municipalities of Ichihara, Kamogawa, Kimitsu, and Ōtaki.[1][2] | ||||||
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9.Chiba Zoological Park | ||||||
The Chiba Zoological Park is located in Chiba Prefecture, east of Tokyo, Japan, and near the shore of Tokyo Bay. The park can be accessed by the Chiba Monorail and is open between 9:30am and 4:30pm. | ||||||
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10.Cape Inubō | ||||||
Cape Inubō (犬吠埼, Inubōsaki) is a cape on the Pacific Ocean, in Chōshi, Chiba Prefecture, Japan. The cape is near the midpoint of the Japanese Archipelago on the island of Honshū. | ||||||
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11.Shimizu Park ・906 Shimizu, Noda-shi, Chiba-ken | ||||||
Shimizu Park (清水公園) is a privately owned park located in Noda City in north-eastern Chibaprefecture about 65 kilometers north of Tokyo. It is located 200 meters west-north-west of Shimizu-kōen Station on the Tōbu Urban Park Line, which is roughly 30 km east of its terminus in central Saitama city. This park is renowned for its cherry blossoms, boasting over two thousand cherry blossoms in fifty varieties. Many of those bloom in late March or April when an annual Cherry Blossom Festival is held. In 1990 Shimizu Park was selected by the Japan Sakura Association as one of Japan's Top 100 Cherry Blossom Spots.[1]Plum trees and azalea plants also abound. Each February a plum festival is held and later in spring an azalea festival follows.[2][3] | ||||||
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Created: 1894 (1894) | ||||||
12.Tomisan Prefectural Natural Park ・Chiba Prefecture, Japan | ||||||
Tomisan Prefectural Natural Park (県立富山自然公園, Kenritsu Tomisan shizen kōen) is a Prefectural Natural Park in southern Chiba Prefecture, Japan. First designated for protection in 1951, the park's central feature is Mount Tomi. The park is wholly within the municipality of Minamibōsō.[1][2] | ||||||
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13.Ōi Futō Chūō Kaihin Park ・Shinagawa Ward and Ōta Ward, Tokyo, Japan | ||||||
Ōi Futō Chūō Kaihin Park (大井ふ頭中央海浜公園, Ōi Futō Chūō Kaihin Kōen) is a public park in Shinagawa Ward and Ōta Ward, Tokyo, Japan. About 69% of the park is in Shinagawa, with the remaining 31% in Ōta. | ||||||
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Created: 1 April 1978 | ||||||
14.Tokyo Wild Bird Park | ||||||
Tokyo Wild Bird Park (東京港野鳥公園, tōkyōkō yachō kōen) is a park located in Ōta Ward, Tokyo.[1] | ||||||
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15.Kasai Rinkai Park ・Edogawa, Tokyo, Japan | ||||||
Kasai Rinkai Park (葛西臨海公園 Kasai Rinkai Kōen) is a park in Edogawa, Tokyo, Japan, it contains Diamond and flower ferris wheel, form the tallest ferris wheel in the world. which officially opened on 1 June 1989.[2] The park includes a bird sanctuary and the Tokyo Sea Life Park aquarium. It was built on reclaimed land which includes two manmade islands, an observation deck and a hotel. It is the second-largest park in the 23 wards of Tokyo (after Mizumoto Park).[3] | ||||||
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Created: 1989 | ||||||
16.Yamashita Park ・Naka-ku, Yokohama, Japan | ||||||
Yamashita Park (山下公園, Yamashita Kōen) is a public park in Naka Ward, Yokohama, Japan, famous for its waterfront views of the Port of Yokohama. Much of Yokohama was destroyed on September 1, 1923, by the Great Kantō earthquake.[1] A Scotsman, Marshall Martin, advisor to Mayor Ariyoshi Chuichi, is credited with persuading the city government to use rubble from the Kannai commercial district to reclaim the former waterfront as a park.[2] | ||||||
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Created: 1930 |