Jackson's Bay Cave

Cave in Jamaica From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jackson's Bay Cave is a very large cave on the Portland Ridge in Clarendon near the south coast of Jamaica. It is considered to be one of the most beautiful in the Caribbean. It was discovered in 1964. It is part of the Jackson bay cave system, consisting of 14 unconnected caves, and over 9200m of cumulated caves passages mapped since then.[2] The longest of them, Jackson Bay Great Cave is over 3.360 kilometres (2.088 mi) long.[3]

LocationClarendon Parish, Jamaica
Coordinates17°44′24″N 77°12′54″W[1]
Length3.360 kilometres (2.088 mi)[2]
Discovery1964
Quick facts Location, Coordinates ...
Jackson's Bay Cave
Map showing the location of Jackson's Bay Cave
Map showing the location of Jackson's Bay Cave
LocationClarendon Parish, Jamaica
Coordinates17°44′24″N 77°12′54″W[1]
Length3.360 kilometres (2.088 mi)[2]
Discovery1964
Entrances14[2]
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History

Pottery shards, rock carvings and rock paintings suggest that the caves were used by the Arawak Indians or Taínos.

Fossils

A specimen of the extinct Jamaican monkey (Xenothrix mcgregori) was found by an American Museum of Natural History expedition c. 19931996. Fossil remains of the Jamaican flightless ibis (Xenicibis xympithecus) and the Jamaican caracara (Caracara tellustris) have also been found there.

See also

References

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