Discover Santa Barbara in Mexico
Santa Barbara in the region of Nayarit is a place located in Mexico - some 379 mi or ( 610 km ) West of Mexico City , the country's capital .
Local time in Santa Barbara is now 08:44 AM (Sunday) . The local timezone is named " America/Mazatlan " with a UTC offset of -7 hours. Depending on your mobility, these larger cities might be interesting for you: Tepic, San Pedro Lagunillas, San Luis Potosí, Morelia, and Mojarras. When in this area, you might want to check out Tepic . We discovered some clip posted online . Scroll down to see the most favourite one or select the video collection in the navigation. Are you looking for some initial hints on what might be interesting in Santa Barbara ? We have collected some references on our attractions page.
Videos
Crater Lake, Nayarit. Mexico
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Interesting facts about this location
Santa María del Oro, Nayarit
Santa María del Oro is a municipality and municipal seat in the Mexican state of Nayarit. It is located in the south of the state and has boundaries with the municipalities of El Nayar, Tepic, Ahuacatlán, Jala, San Pedro Lagunillas, La Yesca, and Xalisco. The population was 21,688 in 2005, with the municipal seat of the same name having 3,314 inhabitants. The total area was 912.90 km². See http://www. e-local. gob. mx/work/templates/enciclo/nayarit/index. html for statistical information.
Located at 21.33 -104.59 (Lat./Long.); Less than 3 km away
San Pedro Lagunillas
San Pedro Lagunillas is both a municipality and the municipal seat of the same in the Mexican state of Nayarit. The population of the municipality was 7,155 (2005) in a total area of 520 square kilometers. The population of the town and municipal seat was 3,630 (2005). The population has been declining since 1980 when it was 8,308 inhabitants.
Located at 21.22 -104.77 (Lat./Long.); Less than 20 km away
Ceboruco (volcano)
Ceboruco is a dacitic stratovolcano located in Nayarit, Mexico, northwest of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt. The largest eruption, the Jala Plinian eruption, was around 930 AD ±200, VEI 6, releasing 11 cubic kilometres of tephra. The most recent and best documented eruption from Ceboruco lasted from 1870–1875, with fumarole activity lasting well into the 20th century.
Located at 21.13 -104.51 (Lat./Long.); Less than 26 km away
Related Locations
Information of geographic nature is based on public data provided by geonames.org, CIA world facts book, Unesco, DBpedia and wikipedia. Weather is based on NOAA GFS.