name "Bodmin Moor" is relatively recent, being an Ordnance Survey invention of 1813. It was formerly known as "Fowey Moor", after the river which rises here
set between Roseland Peninsula and Nare Head; Creek Stephen Point in west, following coast of Gerrans Bay to Nare Head; sweeping bay includes the sandy beaches of Carne and Pendower and fishing village of Portscatho
The Loe (Cornish: An Logh), also known as Loe Pool; largest natural freshwater lake (50 hectares (120 acres)) in Cornwall; situated between Porthleven and Gunwalloe and downstream of Helston; separated from Mount's Bay by shingle bank of Loe Bar; within Penrose Estate, administered by National Trust
beach east of Penzance; site of Cornish wrestling tournaments; either side of Penzance, on beaches at Ponsandane and Wherrytown, evidence of 'submerged forest' can sometimes be seen at low tide in form of several partially fossilised tree trunks
part of Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) in Cornwall Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB); in 1990 part of Rinsey Cliff notified as Porthcew SSSI for mineral assemblage caused by granite contact zone on the Upper Devonian Mylor Slates; contact zone also Geological Conservation Review site of national importance; Between Porthleven and Penzance
small wooded valley and beach in civil parish of St Buryan in Cornwall; located two miles to south of St Buryan churchtown, and between Penberth and Lamorna; within Cornwall Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB), Boscawen SSSI (Site of Special Scientific Interest) and part of a GCR Geological Conservation Review site
The Cheesewring (Cornish: Keuswask[; granite tor in Cornwall; situated on eastern flank of Bodmin Moor on Stowe's Hill in parish of Linkinhorne approximately one mile northwest of village of Minions and four miles (6 km) north of Liskeard