Ragged Island (Massachusetts)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ragged_Island_(Massachusetts) an entity of type: Thing

Ragged Island ist eine Insel in der im Boston Harbor. Sie liegt 12 mi (19,3 km) vom Bostoner Stadtzentrum entfernt auf dem Gebiet des Bundesstaats Massachusetts der Vereinigten Staaten. Ragged Island verfügt über eine Fläche von ca. 4,1 Acres (ca. 1,6 ha), wird von der Stadt verwaltet und ist Teil der Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area. Sie ist täglich von 9 Uhr bis Sonnenuntergang geöffnet. rdf:langString
Ragged Island is an island in the Hingham Bay area of the Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area, in the U.S. state of Massachusetts. The island has a permanent size of 4 acres (16,000 m2), and it is composed of Roxbury puddingstone (pebbles embedded in finer-grained cement) which rises to a height of 30 feet (9.1 m) above sea level. Broken ledges surround most of the island with small gravel beaches on the southeast and northwest sides; there are also small tidal mudflats. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Ragged Island (Massachusetts)
rdf:langString Ragged Island (Massachusetts)
xsd:float 42.25720596313477
xsd:float -70.89044189453125
xsd:integer 2194696
xsd:integer 1027958320
xsd:string 42.25720555555556 -70.8904388888889
rdf:langString Ragged Island ist eine Insel in der im Boston Harbor. Sie liegt 12 mi (19,3 km) vom Bostoner Stadtzentrum entfernt auf dem Gebiet des Bundesstaats Massachusetts der Vereinigten Staaten. Ragged Island verfügt über eine Fläche von ca. 4,1 Acres (ca. 1,6 ha), wird von der Stadt verwaltet und ist Teil der Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area. Sie ist täglich von 9 Uhr bis Sonnenuntergang geöffnet.
rdf:langString Ragged Island is an island in the Hingham Bay area of the Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area, in the U.S. state of Massachusetts. The island has a permanent size of 4 acres (16,000 m2), and it is composed of Roxbury puddingstone (pebbles embedded in finer-grained cement) which rises to a height of 30 feet (9.1 m) above sea level. Broken ledges surround most of the island with small gravel beaches on the southeast and northwest sides; there are also small tidal mudflats. The island was first occupied by in the late seventeenth century. In the late nineteenth century, it was developed as part of a summer resort, and it has subsequently been the site of a restaurant and rustic observation shelters. Today, it is uninhabited and has an interesting mix of cultivated and naturalized plants, including lily-of-the-valley, daylily, silver maple, red maple, Norway maple, cedar, Norway spruce, linden, greenbrier and poison ivy. The island is managed by the town of Hingham and access is by private boat only.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2267
<Geometry> POINT(-70.890441894531 42.257205963135)

data from the linked data cloud