Spanish Holidays
Why not take a vacation in the nation of Spain it can be an awesome place to have a vacation. You may want to see the beaches, the cities, the culture, the towns, the historic sites.
The
Spanish mainland is bordered to the south and east by the Mediterranean Sea except
for a small land boundary with Gibraltar; to the north by France, Andorra, and
the Bay of Biscay; and to the west by the Atlantic Ocean and Portugal. Spanish
territory also includes the Balearic Islands in the Mediterranean, the Canary
Islands in the Atlantic Ocean off the African coast, and two autonomous cities
in North Africa, Ceuta and Melilla, that border Morocco.
Most of Spain's boundaries
are water: the Mediterranean Sea on the south and east from Gibraltar to the French
border and the Atlantic Ocean on the northwest and southwest (in the south as
the Golfo de Cádiz and in the north as the Bay of Biscay). Spain also shares
land boundaries with France and Andorra along the Pyrenees in the northeast, with
Portugal on the west, and with the small British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar
near the southernmost tip. The affiliation of Gibraltar has continued to be a
contentious issue between Spain and Britain and so is the sovereignty of the plazas
de soberanía, claimed by Morocco. Spain also has a small exclave inside
France called Llívia.
The majority of Spain's peninsular region consists of the Meseta Central, a highland plateau rimmed and dissected by mountain ranges. Other landforms include narrow coastal plains and some lowland river valleys, the most prominent of which is the Andalusian Plain in the southwest. The country can be divided into ten natural regions or subregions: the dominant Meseta Central, the Cordillera Cantabrica and the northwest region, the Ibérico region, the Pyrenees, the Penibético region in the southeast, the Andalusian Plain, the Ebro Basin, the coastal plains, the Balearic Islands, and the Canary Islands. These are commonly grouped into four types: the Meseta Central and associated mountains, other mountainous regions, lowland regions, and islands.
The major lowland regions are the Andalusian Plain in the southwest, the Ebro Basin in the northeast, and the coastal plains. The Andalusian Plain is essentially a wide river valley through which the Río Guadalquivir flows. The river broadens out along its course, reaching its widest point at the Golfo de Cadiz. The Andalusian Plain is bounded on the north by the Sierra Morena and on the south by the Sistema Penibético; it narrows to an apex in the east where these two mountain chains meet. The Ebro Basin is formed by the Río Ebro valley, contained by mountains on three sides--the Sistema Ibérico to the south and west, the Pyrenees to the north and east, and their coastal extensions paralleling the shore to the east. Minor low-lying river valleys close to the Portuguese border are located on the Tagus and the Río Guadiana.
The Coastal Plains regions are narrow strips between the coastal mountains and the seas. They are broadest along the Golfo de Cádiz, where the coastal plain adjoins the Andalusian Plain, and along the southern and central eastern coasts. The narrowest coastal plain runs along the Bay of Biscay, where the Cordillera Cantábrica ends close to shore.
The islands
The remaining regions of Spain are the Balearic and the Canary Islands, the former located in the Mediterranean Sea and the latter in the Atlantic Ocean. The Balearic Islands, encompassing a total area of 5,000 square kilometers, lie 80 kilometers off Spain's central eastern coast. The mountains that rise up above the Mediterranean Sea to form these islands are an extension of the Sistema Penibetico. The archipelago's highest points, which reach 1,400 meters, are in northwestern Majorca, close to the coast. The central portion of Majorca is a plain, bounded on the east and the southeast by broken hills.
The Canary Islands, ninety kilometers off the west coast of Africa, are of volcanic origin. The large central islands, Gran Canaria and Tenerife, have the highest peaks. Pico de Las Nieves, on Gran Canaria, rises to 1,949 meters, and the Teide, on Tenerife, to 3,717 meters. Teide, a dormant volcano, is the highest peak of Spain.
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