Fajã do Boi
Fajã do Boi | |
Debris field (Fajã) | |
Country | Portugal |
---|---|
Autonomous region | Azores |
Group | Central |
Island | São Jorge |
Municipality | Velas |
Civil parish | Rosais |
Biomes | Temperate, Mediterranean |
Geology | Alkali basalt, Tephra, Trachyte, Trachybasalt |
Orogeny | Volcanism |
Period | Holocene |
Management | Secretário Regional do Ambiente e do Mar |
- location | Rua Cônsul Dabney - Colónia Alemã, 140, Horta, Faial |
- elevation | 28 m (92 ft) |
- coordinates | 38°32′2″N 28°37′45″W / 38.53389°N 28.62917°W |
Owner | Regional Government of the Azores |
For public | Public |
Visitation | Accessible by foot, yet restricted during periods of inclement weather |
Easiest access | By dirt trail between de João Dias and da Ermida |
Geographic detail from CAOP (2010)[1] produced by Instituto Geográfico Português (IGP) | |
The Fajã do Boi is a permanent debris field, built from the collapsing cliffs on the northern coast of the civil parish of Rosais, in the municipality of Velas, island of São Jorge, in the Portuguese archipelago of the Azores.
Located between the fajãs of João Dias and da Ermida, there is no permanent human settlement on the fajã.
Following the 1980 earthquake, the area was abandoned due to the instability of homes and cliff faces: many of the residents moved into the interior. Today the area is primarily for subsistence farming and grazing, for cultivating vineyards and as a location for fishing (in the winter and spring).
References
- ↑ IGP, ed. (2010), Carta Administrativa Oficial de Portugal (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: Instituto Geográfico Português, retrieved 1 July 2011