Papafragas

E376315

Papafragas is a dramatic sea cave and small beach on the Greek island of Milos, known for its steep rock walls, turquoise water, and narrow inlet to the Aegean Sea.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Papafragas canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf beach
sea cave
bestVisitSeason late spring to early autumn
country Greece
faces Aegean Sea
hasAccessType steep path
steps carved into rock
hasBeachType small cove beach
hasCaveType narrow sea cave channel
hasCliffHeight high vertical cliffs
hasFacilities no organized beach facilities on the sand
parking area above the cliffs
hasGeologicalFeature narrow inlet
steep rock walls
hasNaturalForm sea cave carved by wave erosion
hasPhotographicInterest contrasting white rock and blue water
narrow sea channel
natural rock arches nearby
hasSandType coarse sand and pebbles
hasShade limited natural shade
hasSwimmingConditions can be rough in strong north winds
hasViewOf Aegean Sea waters
surface form: Aegean Sea horizon
hasWaterColor turquoise
hasWaterType clear shallow waters near the beach
isKnownFor dramatic scenery
natural rock formations
isPartOf coastline of northern Milos
isPopularFor cliff photography
sightseeing
swimming
locatedIn Aegean Sea
Cyclades
South Aegean
surface form: South Aegean region
locatedOnIsland Milos
nameLanguage Greek
nearbyAttraction Pollonia beaches
Sarakiniko Beach
nearbySettlement Adamas, Milos
surface form: Adamas

Pollonia
reachableBy boat (from sea)
bus
car
safetyConsideration risk from falling rocks
steep and sometimes slippery access path
strong currents possible at cave mouth
tourismType beach tourism
geotourism
natural attraction

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Milos hasBeach Papafragas