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A watery section of Shamrock Passage, Jackson Bay Cave
A watery tunnel flowing through the Jackson Bay Cave known as Shamrock Passage.
Shamrock Passage, Jackson Bay
Draperies, stalactites and stalagmites in the Shamrock Passage of the Jackson Bay Cave.
So called 'Water Cave' - Jackson Bay
"Some distance from the entrance is the so-called "water cave" an area where the water is knee high. here another opening allows sunlight to come in, and also bats."
Jackson Bay
"Jackson Bay - below ground everything seems to have come from another world."
Jackson Bay, Clarendon - The great cave
"The Great Cave near here has been described by some as "the finest of all known Jamaican caves." One of the first authors to write about Jamaica's caves, including those in Clarendon was Sir Henry Thomas de la Beche in 1825, 1827."
One of the larger caves at Nonsuch
"One of the larger cave dwellings which boast fresh water streams at Nonsuch Caves."
View from the inside Nonsuch Caves
"View of the inside of a cave looking out of its two window-like entrances."
Entrance to Nonsuch Caves
"Entrance to Nonsuch Cave...covered with hanging vines."
A cave entrance
An entrance to Nonsuch Cave in Portland.
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Oberlin United Church
Photograph of the United Church in Jamaica and the Cayman Islands, (Congregational Disciples of Christ Presbyterian), Oberlin, located in rural St.…