Freshwater
Freshwater is a large village and also civil parish at the western end of the Isle of Wight, England. Freshwater Bay is a small cove on the south coast of the Island which additionally gives its name to the close-by part of Freshwater. Freshwater sits at the western end of the region called the Back of the Wight or the West Wight which is a popular visitor area. Freshwater is close to high chalk cliffs. It was the birth place of physicist Robert Hooke and also was the house of Poet Laureate Alfred Lord Tennyson. Freshwater is well-known for its geology and coastal rock formations that have resulted from centuries well worth of seaside disintegration. The "Arch Rock" was a well-known neighborhood site that collapsed on 25 October 1992. The adjoining "Stag Rock" is so called due to the fact that allegedly a stag jumped to the rock from the cliff to get away during a search. An additional substantial slab fell off the cliff face in 1968, and also is now called the "Mermaid Rock". Instantly behind Mermaid Rock lies a small Sea cave that reduces numerous metres right into the new high cliff.