User:Morwen/n corners

An n-corners point is a where four or more political boundaries meet. The only known international example is the point where Zimbabwe, Angola, Zambia and Botswana meet, Victoria Falls.

In the United States, many counties were laid out on a grid system so there are many four corners points between counties, but only one between four states - the Four Corners point, where Utah, Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona.

There is also a Four Corners point in Canada.

An extreme example exists in Suffolk, England, where nine civil parishes meet within a few metres at Rymer Point near Honington. The parishes in question are Euston, Fakenham Magna, Honington, Troston, Great Livermere, Little Livermere, Ingham, Culford and Barnham. In England there is also the No Man's Heath point, which marks the confluence of the traditional boundaries of Warwickshire, Leicestershire, Staffordshire, and Derbyshire, although an exact point no longer exists.