Jura is an island in the Inner Hebrides of Scotland, beside as well as northeast of Islay. With a location of 36,692 hectares, or 142 square miles, as well as only 196 residents recorded in the 2011 census, Jura is far more sparsely booming than Islay, and also is among the least densely inhabited islands of Scotland: in a checklist of the islands of Scotland placed by dimension, Jura comes 8th, whereas by population it comes 31st. Jura belongs to the council area of Argyll and Bute. The island is hilly, bare and infertile, covered largely by large areas of covering bog. The primary negotiation is the eastern coast town of Craighouse, which is its resources. Craighouse is home to the Jura distillery, producing Isle of Jura solitary malt whisky. The town is likewise home to the island's only hotel, shop as well as church. Other negotiations include Ardfernal, Ardmenish, Inverlussa, Keils, Kinuachdrachd, Knockrome, Lagg, Leargybreck as well as Tarbert. In between Jura's north tip and the island of Scarba exists the Gulf of Corryvreckan, where a whirlpool makes flow unsafe at specific states of the tide. The southern part of the island, from Loch Tarbert southwards, is assigned a nationwide picturesque location (NSA), one of 40 such locations in Scotland, which are specified so regarding identify locations of extraordinary views as well as ensure their security from unacceptable development. The Jura NSA covers 30,317 hectares in total, consisting of 21,072 ha of land, with an additional 9245 ha being aquatic (i.e. below low tide).