Zone Point Explained

Zone Point (Cornish: '''Sawan Hir''', meaning long chasm)[1] is the southernmost extremity of the Roseland peninsula extending into Falmouth Bay near St Mawes in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom at .[2] It is approximately 500m (1,600feet) east-southeast of the St. Anthony's Lighthouse on St Anthony Head. The cliffs make the beach between Zone Point and St Anthony Head inaccessible from land and the small bay is the site of many Atlantic grey seal sightings; Atlantic grey seal pups can be seen on this beach from the headland and the sea.

The top of Zone Point is pasture with scrubby slopes. The South West Coast Path marks the transition between the two ecotypes.

The origin of the name Zone Point first appears in the 1597 map of the River Fal by Baptista Boazio as Savenheer, or the long coved point.[3]

References

50.1392°N -5.5°W

Notes and References

  1. [Weatherhill, Craig]
  2. Ordnance Survey One-inch Map of Great Britain; Truro and Falmouth, sheet 190. 1961
  3. Jeffery. Henry. A Map of the River Fal and its Tributaries from a survey made in 1597, by Baptista Boazio. Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall. 1886. 9. 1. 167.