Chocolate Hills is located in Bohol Province, Philippines. This a tourist attraction for many. It is rated as a National Geological Monument. The Chocolate Hills are a geological formation of hills.
Examples of common nouns for the proper noun 'Chocolate Hills' (in Bohol province, the Philippines) are:featurekarstlandformlimestoneprotected areatourist attraction
wht are the pysical characteristics of the chocolate hills
There are approximately 1,776 Chocolate Hills in the Philippines, located in the province of Bohol. These cone-shaped hills are a popular tourist attraction due to their unique shape and formation.
The Chocolate Hills are located in Bohol, a province in the Central Visayas region of the Philippines. They are a unique geological formation, consisting of around 1,268 cone-shaped hills covered in green grass that turns brown during the dry season, resembling chocolate kisses.
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Bohol has lots of tourist because of the following: Chocolate Hills Panglao Beach Tarsier Loboc Floating Resto Man Made Forest Sagbayan Peak Dolphin Watching Island Hopping Snorkeling
Bohol has lots of tourist because of the following: Chocolate Hills Panglao Beach Tarsier Loboc Floating Resto Man Made Forest Sagbayan Peak Dolphin Watching Island Hopping Snorkeling
The Chocolate Hills in Bohol are a unique geological feature of between 1268 to 1776 cone shaped hills spread across an area of about 20 square miles or 50 square kilometers. They are called the chocolate hills due to the fact that the grass covering the hills turns brown in the dry season. In a scientific paper published in 1970 by a German geologist it was reported that the Chocolate Hills in Bohol were formed 3 million years ago when the island was below sea level. Recent discoveries of marine fossils support the theory that the entire island was under water. Although no one knows for certain how the Chocolate Hills were formed, some scientists believe they were created when volcanic activity caused upheaval in the sea bed which the underwater currents then formed into the conical shapes we see today.