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This article may lack focus or may be about more than one topic.In particular, Some entries are not tourist attractions, but examples of Nigerian natural features. Please help improve this article, possibly by splitting the article and/or by introducing a disambiguation page, or discuss this issue on the talk page.
Name Image Location Criteria Year Description; Sukur Cultural Landscape: Adamawa. Cultural (iii) (v) (vi) 1999 The Sukur Cultural Landscape, with the Palace of the Hidi (Chief) on a hill dominating the villages below, the terraced fields and their sacred symbols, and the extensive remains of a former flourishing iron industry, is a remarkably intact physical expression of a society and its ...
Topo Island is an island located in the Topo town area of Badagry Local Government of Lagos State, in South-west Nigeria. The island was home to the missionaries who built a Chapel, Convent, Teacher training college, cemetery and also a coconut plantation. The island was later abandoned in 1962 when the missionaries left and the locals also ...
Tourism in Nigeria centers largely on events, due to the country's ample amount of ethnic groups, but also includes rainforests, savannah, waterfalls, and other natural attractions. [1] Tourists spent US$2.6 billion in Nigeria in 2015.
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The Millennium Park is the largest public park of Abuja, [1] [2] [3] the capital of Nigeria and is located in the Maitama district of the city. The Millennium Park was inaugurated by Queen Elizabeth II on 4 December 2003. [4] [5] [6] It is near the former Presidential Palace close to the nucleus of presidential and administrative buildings of ...
Gurara Waterfalls is located in Gurara, a local government area of Niger State, North Central Nigeria. [2] The waterfalls is approximately 30 metres in height and it lies on the Gurara River along the Suleja-Minna Road. [3]
Sungbo's Eredo is a system of defensive walls and ditches that is located to the southwest of the Yoruba town of Ijebu Ode in Ogun State, southwest NigeriaIt was built in 800–1000 AD in honour of the Ijebu noblewoman Oloye Bilikisu Sungbo.