康昱装饰
尼亚加拉瀑布的英文为“Niagara Falls”,英音和美音读法均为 [naɪ'æɡərə fɔːlz] 。
尼亚加拉瀑布位于加拿大安大略省和美国纽约州的交界处,瀑布源头为尼亚加拉河,主瀑布位于加拿大境内,是瀑布的最佳观赏地;在美国境内瀑布由月亮岛隔开,观赏的是瀑布侧面。
尼亚加拉河的水流冲下悬崖至下游重新汇合,在不足 2 公里长的河段里以每小时 35.4 公里的速度跌荡而下 15.8 米的落差,演绎出世界上最狂野的漩涡急流,经过左岸加拿大的昆斯顿、右岸美国的利维斯顿,冲过“魔鬼洞急流”,沿着最后的“利维斯顿支流峡谷”由西向东进入安大略湖。
尼亚加拉瀑布与伊瓜苏大瀑布、维多利亚瀑布并称为世界三大跨国瀑布。
尼亚加拉瀑布的附近景点(旅游组合)包括但不限于:
1、百年紫丁香花园—百年紫丁香花园及花钟(Centennial Lilac Gardens and the Floral Clock):游览尼亚加拉瀑布的游客一般都要到加拿大境内的维多利亚公园看看。园内林木繁盛,鲜花盛开,绿草如茵。秋分时节,满园撒落鲜红的枫叶,萧瑟静穆又浓烈醉人。
2、格雷特峡谷探险(Grate Gorge Adventure)。
3、尼亚加拉古要塞—位于美国和加拿大的边境,安大略湖边上的一块峭壁上,毗邻尼亚加拉州立公园,是法国人 Pierre Pouchot 于 1726 年为了防止印第安人袭击而建的防御性堡垒,内设法国式造型的博物馆,馆内陈列有 18、19 世纪的军事建筑和防御工事。
4、尼亚加拉峡谷(Niagara Glen)—还可看到许多小瀑布,环境幽境如诗如画。这些地方虽然与瀑布的景象不同,但各具特色,同样美景无限,如诗如画,非常值得一游。
5、尼亚加拉瀑布博物馆—设于彩虹桥旁边。它建于 1827 年,是北美历史最悠久的博物馆之一。里面展示了美洲早期的史迹,古代的武器与石器,有雀鸟的标本,古埃及的木乃伊,超过 15 米长的鲸鱼骨骼。最难得的是还可以看到取自美国加里福尼亚森林的世界最大的红杉。
以上内容参考:百度百科-尼亚加拉瀑布
刹那恍惚28
被称为世界七大奇景之一的尼亚加拉大瀑布位于加拿大和美国交界的尼亚加拉河上,它那丰沛而浩瀚的水汽和磅礴的气势,使所有前来观赏的游人都为之震撼。 尼亚加拉河长约56米,上接海拔174米的伊利湖,下注海拔75米的安大略湖。这99米的落差,已足以形成湍急的水流,而两湖之间横亘着的一道石灰岩断崖,更使水量丰富的尼亚加拉河水在经过这里时骤然陡落,水势澎湃,声震如雷。 从高处的伊利湖到低处的安大略湖,在经过河床绝壁上的半岛时,湖水分隔成了两部份,分别流入加拿大和美国,形成了一大一小两个瀑布。这两个瀑布在加拿大这边的景致比在美国看起来要更加美丽壮观。 Niagara Falls comprises three distinct cataracts. The tallest are the American and Bridal Veil falls on the American side, separated by tiny Luna Island and plunging over jagged rocks in a 180ft drop; the broad Horseshoe Falls which curve their way over to Canada are probably the most impressive. They date back a mere twelve thousand years, when the retreat of melting glaciers allowed water trapped in Lake Erie to gush north to Lake Ontario. Back then the falls were seven miles downriver, but constant erosion has cut them back to their present site. The falls are colorfully lit up at night, and many say they're most beautiful in winter, when the grounds are covered in snow and the waters turn to ice. The best views on the American side are from the Prospect Point Observation Tower (daily; 50¢), and from the area at its base where the water rushes past; Terrapin Point on Goat Island in the middle of the river has similar views of Horseshoe Falls. The nineteenth-century tightrope-walker Blondin crossed the Niagara repeatedly near here, and even carried passengers across on his back; other suicidal fools over the years have taken the plunge in barrels. One survivor among the many fatalities was the Englishman Bobby Leach, who went over in a steel barrel in July 1911 and had to spend the rest of the year in hospital. That practice has since been banned (though a couple of maniacs did it in summer 1995 and came away with minor bruises), for reasons which become self-evident when you approach the towering cascade on the not-to-be-missed Maid of the Mist boat trip from the foot of the observation tower (summer Mon-Fri 10am-5pm, Sat & Sun 10am-6pm; $8.50; 716/284-4233). From Goat Island, the Cave of the Winds tour leads down to the base of the falls by elevator to within almost touching distance of the water (mid-May to late Oct; $5.50). A combination pass for these and other attractions costs $16. Rainbow helicopter tours (716/284-2800) are a more expensive proposition at $40 per person for a ten-minute ride. To check the view out from Niagara Falls, Ontario, it's a twenty-minute walk across the Rainbow Bridge to the Canadian side (25¢ each way; bring ID, and check with US Immigration officials before heading across), where you get an arguably better view, bigger crowds and even more tawdry commercialism. Driving across is inadvisable: the toll for a car is just 75¢, but parking on the other side is upwards of $15. As you look on in awe, reflect that you're seeing only about half the volume of water - the rest is diverted to hydroelectric power stations. The full story of this engineering feat is related at the free Niagara Power Project Visitors Center in nearby Lewiston (July & Aug daily 9am-6pm; Sept-June daily 10am-5pm; 716/285-3211). With your own transportation it's also possible to trace the inhospitable Niagara Gorge two miles along the dramatic Robert Moses Parkway to the Whirlpool Rapids, a violent maelstrom swollen by broken trees and other flotsam. Ten miles east of Niagara Falls, the town of LOCKPORT takes its name from the series of locks that raise and lower boats some 65ft at the western end of the Erie Canal. You can see the impressive flight of locks from the Pine Street Bridge, or up close on canal boat tours (May - Nov daily at 12.30 & 3pm, also 10am on Sat; $9; 716/693-3260).
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