Poiana Ruscă Mountains Explained

The Poiana Ruscă Mountains (part of the Western Carpathians)[1] are a Carpathian mountain range in western Romania. The mountains are situated roughly south of the Mureș River, northeast of the Timiș River, and west of the Strei River. The Bega River emerges from these mountains. The nearest large towns are Lugoj, Hunedoara, and Caransebeș.

The Poiana Ruscă Mountains cover an area of about, having mean altitudes from 700to. The highest summit is the, at .

Mining

The mountains contain resources such as magnetite, iron, thorium and lead, and as such are the site of many mines. In the nineteenth century, the mountains were also centers of gold, silver, and salt mining and production.[2] However, after 1990 some mines were closed and others abandoned, leaving waste ore and radioactive mines still unprotected in the mountain range.[3]

Divisions of the mountains

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Route H1 - Hiking in Meridionali Carpathians . Activ Travel. 2009-03-01.
  2. Web site: namr.ro. https://archive.today/20130416110009/http://www.namr.ro/documente/history.htm. dead. 2013-04-16. 2009-03-01.
  3. Web site: Polluted Places: Poiana Ruscă Mountains, Romania. 2009-03-01. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080618203338/http://www.pollutedplaces.org/region/e_europe/ruscamts_nomination.html. 2008-06-18.