Great Britain won three more gold medals as they passed the 100-medal mark on day 10 of the Tokyo Paralympics.
The golds went to canoeist Emma Wiggs and athletes Jonathan Broom-Edwards and Owen Miller.
Wiggs was victorious in the VL2 200m event - the first time that the Va'a boat, which is an outrigger canoe with a support float and is used with a single-bladed paddle - has been raced at the Paralympics.
She will aim to defend her KL2 kayak title on Saturday.
World champion Broom-Edwards, a silver medallist in Rio, went one better this time in the T64 category by clearing 2.10m with his second attempt for gold after he needed three efforts at 2.07m.
Miller, making his Paralympic debut, put in a strong final lap to win the T20 1500m in three minutes 54.57 seconds, ahead of Russian Alexander Rabotnitskii.
However, Richard Whitehead had to settle for silver in his bid to win a third 200m title in row, losing out to South African 19-year-old Ntando Mahlangu in the T61 category. Meanwhile, defending champion Hollie Arnold could only take bronze in the F46 javelin.
Arnold led going into the final round with 39.05m but was overhauled by both world record holder Hollie Robinson from New Zealand (40.99m) and Dutchwoman Noelle Roorda (40.06m), who took gold and silver respectively.
Beth Munro made history with Britain's first taekwondo medal at the Paralympics with silver in the -58kg event.
The 28-year-old from Liverpool, who only took up the sport in late 2019, lost 32-14 to Denmark's Lisa Gjessing, the four-time world champion.
The GB men's wheelchair basketball team will play Spain for bronze on Sunday after a 79-68 loss to hosts Japan in the semi-finals.
It is the sixth Games in a row that GB have been in the third and fourth play-off.
On the final day of the swimming programme, there was heartbreak for Britain's Stephen Clegg who was beaten to gold by 0.06 seconds in the final of the S12 100m butterfly.
Clegg, the world record holder, who had won two bronzes earlier in the Games, lost out to Raman Salei of Azerbaijan.
"I'm going to be lying if I say I'm not gutted with that performance today," he said after clocking 57.87 seconds. "I definitely had a different colour in mind coming into this."
There was also silver for wheelchair tennis pair Gordon Reid and Alfie Hewett in the men's doubles, the tandem pair of Sophie Unwin and her pilot Jenny Holl in the women's B road race and for the class 6-7 table tennis team of Will Bayley and Paul Karabardak.
The universal relay team of Libby Clegg and her guide Chris Clarke, Jonnie Peacock, Ali Smith and Nathan Maguire were upgraded to silver from bronze after China were disqualified. USA took the gold.
Reid and Hewett lost out in a final-set tie-break to Stephane Houdet and Nicolas Peifer in a repeat of the Rio final which the French pair also won.
Unwin and Holl beat Sweden's Louise Jannering and Anna Svaerdstroem in a sprint for silver after Ireland's Katie-George Dunlevy and Eve McCrystal made a late charge for gold.
Bayley and Karabardak faced a tough task against the Chinese pairing of Liao Keli and Yan Shuo and having lost the opening doubles, Bayley was beaten in his singles match as their opponents wrapped up a comfortable win.
There were bronzes for Jordanne Whiley in wheelchair tennis singles, Jeanette Chippington and Rob Oliver in Para-canoe and athlete Hannah Taunton.
Whiley won Britain's first women's singles medal at the Paralympics with a 6-4 6-7 (7-9) 6-4 victory over Dutchwoman Aniek van Koot.
Chippington, 51, who is competing in her seventh Games having made her debut as a swimmer in Seoul in 1988, finished third behind Wiggs while there was also bronze for team-mate Oliver in the KL3 event.
And Taunton, who like Miller competes in the T20 category for athletes with an intellectual impairment, ran a personal best to grab bronze in her 1500m final.
Wiggs paddles to glory
Wiggs won gold when Para-canoe made its debut in Rio but had wrist surgery in 2018 which left her fearing for her sporting future.
She had a tough rehabilitation which she described as leaving her "feeling completely lost and probably for the first time in my life I felt disabled, with a little wrist injury".
Back to full fitness, she led from the front to win in 57.028 seconds, more four seconds clear of Australia's Susan Seipel with Chippington third.
"It does feel just incredibly emotional," she added. "I'm just so overwhelmingly grateful to the Japanese people and the organising committee to get these Games on. It was so important for the continued progression of Paralympic sport that we were here.
"I love the fact I can leave my wheelchair on the side of the lake and paddle off and no-one walking their dog can tell which bits of you work and which bits don't."