Queen's Road, Gibraltar

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Queen's Road
1890s G Washington Wilson - San Roque y parte de La Linea desde Queens Road.jpg
Location Gibraltar
Coordinates 36°07′57″N5°20′53″W / 36.132398°N 5.348089°W / 36.132398; -5.348089

Queen's Road is the longest road in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar. It runs north-south through the Upper Rock Nature Reserve on the Rock of Gibraltar. It forks into Old Queen's Road which runs almost parallel with it for some part. The narrow road is halfway up the Rock and overlooks the Bay of Gibraltar. St. Michael's Cave lies off this road on Spur Battery Road. [1] This is a large show cave featuring stalactites and stalagmites and an auditorium large enough to take orchestras. [2] Also of note, apart from the nature reserve, are the Great Siege Tunnels at the northern end.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lord Airey's Battery</span> Artillery battery in Gibraltar

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New St. Michael's Cave, also known as Lower St. Michael's Cave, is a cave system in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar. Unlike its namesake, St. Michael's Cave (proper), which has been known for over 2,000 years, this cave was discovered as recently as World War II.

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Douglas Cave is a cave in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar.

George's Bottom Cave is a cave in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar. This together with Tina's Fissure and Levant Cave are a close group of three caves at the southern end of the Upper Rock Nature Reserve.

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Levant Cave is a cave in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar. Together with Tina's Fissure and George's Bottom Cave, Levant Cave is part of a close group of three caves at the southern end of the Upper Rock Nature Reserve.

Tina's Fissure is a cave in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar. Tina's Fissure, George's Bottom Cave and Levant Cave are a close group of three caves at the southern end of the Upper Rock Nature Reserve.

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The footpaths of Gibraltar provide access to key areas of the Upper Rock Nature Reserve, a refuge for hundreds of species of flora and fauna which in some cases are found nowhere else in Europe. The reserve occupies the upper part of the Rock of Gibraltar, a long and narrow mountain that rises to a maximum height of 424 metres (1,391 ft) above sea level, and constitutes around 40 per cent of Gibraltar's total land area. The unusual geology of the Rock of Gibraltar – a limestone peak adjoining a sandstone hinterland – provides a habitat for plants and animals, such as the Gibraltar candytuft and Barbary partridge, which are found nowhere else in mainland Europe. For many years, the Upper Rock was reserved exclusively for military use; it was fenced off for military purposes, but was decommissioned and converted into a nature reserve in 1993.

References

  1. Fodor, Eugene (2004). Fodor's Spain. D. McKay. p. 452. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  2. Price, Danforth (2009). Frommer's Seville, Granada and the Best of Andalusia. John Wiley & Sons. p. 298. ISBN   9780470487143.