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Shankumugham Beach is a beach in Thiruvananthapuram district of Kerala, south India. The beach is on the western side of Thiruvananthapuram and is very close to Thiruvananthapuram International Airport. Shanghumugham beach is considered as the ‘Arattukadavu’ of Sri Ananthapadmanabhan - the presiding deity of the city.
Kovalam has three beaches separated by rocky outcroppings in its 17 km coastline, the three together form the crescent of the Kovalam beach. [4] [5] Lighthouse Beach – the southernmost beach, the Lighthouse Beach, is named after the 118 feet (36 m) Vizhinjam Lighthouse located on top of the Kurumkal hillock. [6] [7]
Tourism in Thiruvananthapuram district in the Indian state of Kerala promotes the area's hill stations, backwaters, beaches, lagoons, and wildlife sanctuaries. The area is a tourism destination and receives chartered flights for medical tourism , as there are more than a hundred recognised Ayurveda centres in and around the city.
Muzhappilangad Beach is the longest drive-in beach in Asia Kovalam Beach in Trivandrum city Bekal fort beach Puthuponnani promontary beach, Malappuram. Beaches in the Indian state of Kerala are spread along the 550-km Indian Ocean coastline. Kerala is an Indian state occupying the south-west corner of the subcontinent. The topography of the ...
Malayalam, English: Time zone: UTC+5:30 : Puthenthope Beach is the vast and beautiful beach in Thiruvananthapuram district of Kerala, south India. External links
Varkala beach is the only place in southern Kerala where cliffs are found adjacent to the Arabian Sea. [1] These cliffs are of tertiary [clarification needed] sedimentary formation and named by geologists as Varkala Formation. They are a geological monument as recorded by the Geological Survey of India.
Pozhiyoor is near several other tourist destinations such as Kovalam, Poovar and Padmanabhapuram Palace.It has an estuary which connects with the sea during high tides. The Pozhikkara beach is located in Pozhiyoor, where the Neyyar, Southern Peninsular river joins at the Arabian
Resorts dot the lengths and breadths of Kerala. Since its incorporation as a state, Kerala's economy largely operated under welfare-based democratic socialist principles. . This mode of development, though it resulted in a high Human Development Index and standard of living among the people, led to an economic stagnation in the 1980s (growth rate are 2.3% annually).