1.Tsurugisan Quasi-National Park ・Tokushima/Kōchi Prefecture, Japan | ||||||
Tsurugisan Quasi-National Park (剣山国定公園, Tsurugisan kokutei kōen) is a Quasi-National Park that spans the borders of Tokushima and Kōchi Prefectures, Japan.[2][3] It was founded on 3 March 1964 and has an area of 209.6 km2 (80.9 sq mi).[4] Within Tokushima Prefecture, the park includes a stretch of the Yoshino River and the Iya Valley.[5] | ||||||
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2.Muroto-Anan Kaigan Quasi-National Park ・Kōchi/Tokushima Prefecture, Japan | ||||||
Muroto-Anan Quasi-National Park (室戸阿南海岸国定公園, Muroto-Anan Kokutei Kōen) is a Quasi-National Park on the coast of Kōchi Prefecture and Tokushima Prefecture, Japan.[2][3] It was founded on 1 June 1964 and has an area of 72.2 km2 (27.9 sq mi).[4] | ||||||
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3.Ōge-jima ・Seto Inland Sea | ||||||
Ōge-jima (大毛島) is an island in the Seto Inland Sea administered under Naruto in Tokushima Prefecture. Ōge-jima, also called Ōge Island, is located in the northeast of Tokushima Prefecture, on the island of Shikoku, Japan . Together with Taka-shima and Shimada-jima, the island to which it is connected by the Horikoshi Bridge,[2] it forms the northeast part of Naruto. It is connected to the island of Shikoku by the Konaruto Bridge,[2] and, by the Ōnaruto Bridge spanning the Naruto Strait, to Awaji Island, an island in the Seto Inland Sea.[2] | ||||||
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4.Naruto Strait | ||||||
Naruto Strait (鳴門海峡, Naruto-kaikyō) is a strait between Awaji Island and Shikoku in Japan. It connects Harima Nada, the eastern part of the Inland Sea and the Kii Channel. A famous feature of the strait is the Naruto whirlpools. Ōnaruto Bridge, the southern part of the Kobe-Awaji-Naruto Expressway, crosses over it. | ||||||
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