Puerto del Rosario Lighthouse

The Puerto del Rosario Lighthouse (Spanish: Faro de Puerto del Rosario) also known as the Punta Gaviota Lighthouse is a modern active lighthouse on the Canary island of Fuerteventura. It is located in an industrial area at the north-eastern end of the town of Puerto del Rosario, the capital and major port of the island in the Province of Las Palmas.[2]

Puerto del Rosario Lighthouse
Gaviota
Lighthouse to the right of the power station
Canary Islands
LocationPuerto del Rosario
Fuerteventura
Canary Islands
Spain
Coordinates28.505378°N 13.843756°W / 28.505378; -13.843756
Year first constructed1992
Foundationcylindrical basement
Constructionconcrete tower
Tower shapecylindrical tower with double balcony and lantern
Markings / patternunpainted tower, grey lantern dome
Tower height43 metres (141 ft)
Focal height48 metres (157 ft)
Light sourcemains power
Range20 nautical miles (37 km; 23 mi)
CharacteristicFl W 5s.
Admiralty numberD2793.5
NGA number113-24034
ARLHS numberCAI-064
Spain numberES-12165
Managing agentAutoridad Portuaria de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria[1]

Description

The Puerto del Rosario Light is the main navigation marker for the shipping arriving at the port on the eastern side of the island. It lies between the Punta Martiño Lighthouse on the island of Lobos to the north and the Punta La Entallada Lighthouse in Tuineje to the south.[3]

The lighthouse first entered service in 1992, as part of the third maritime lighting plan for the Canaries, other lighthouses that were built as part of the same plan include Punta Lava and Arenas Blancas on La Palma, Punta del Castillete on Gran Canaria and Morro Jable also on Fuerteventura.[4] It consists of a 43 m high cylinder-shaped tower, which is white in colour, this supports twin galleries and a lantern with a grey cupola.[2]

The optics include a 2.25m diameter lens, equipped with a 150 watt discharge lamp, which is connected to mains electricity and a back-up battery system. With a focal height of 48 m above sea level, the light can be seen for 20 nautical miles. Its light characteristic is a flash of white light every five seconds. The reserve light has a range of nine nautical miles.[2][5]

The lighthouse is maintained by the port authority of Las Palmas, and is registered under the international Admiralty number D2793.5 and has the NGA identifier of 113-24034.[2][6]

gollark: Markdown is so weird and annoying to parse.
gollark: Anyway, by perpetuating the "GB is base 2" thing, you aid the confusion which allows HDD makers to ship mildly less storage than they otherwise might, and which is generally kind of irritating if you need precise units in things.
gollark: If we amputate 8 fingers from all humans by force, we will finally enter a golden age of binary prefixes.
gollark: Specialized binary prefixes let you use base 2 if you want to for some reason but use the more consistent and easier to manipulate base 10.
gollark: Programmers like base 2, but all other stuff is mostly done in base 10 and the prefixes were designed around that.

See also

References

  1. Gaviota (Puerto del Rosario) Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved 30 March 2016
  2. Rowlett, Russ. "Lighthouses of Spain: Canary Islands". The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  3. Griffes; National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (1 October 2009). NGA Sailing Directions-Enroute: 2008 West Coast of Europe and Northwest Africa (11th Edition). ProStar Publications. p. 177. ISBN 978-1-57785-885-0.
  4. "Los faros que alumbran et Atlantico" (in Spanish). teldeactualidad.com. Archived from the original on 8 August 2017. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  5. "Faro de Puerto del Rosario". Maritime Signals (in Spanish). Puertos de las Palmas. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  6. List of Lights, Pub. 113: The West Coasts of Europe and Africa, the Mediterranean Sea, Black Sea and Azovskoye More (Sea of Azov) (PDF). List of Lights. United States National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. 2013. p. 422.
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