Serra de Vallivana explained

Serra de Vallivana
Highest:Muixacre
Elevation M:1275
Map:Spain
Listing:List of mountains in the Valencian Community
Location:Alt Maestrat & Baix Maestrat, Valencian Community
Parent:Iberian System, eastern end
Coordinates:40.53°N 0.0339°W
Length Km:14
Length Orientation:WNW/ESE
Width Km:3
Width Orientation:NNE/SSW
Geology:Karstic

Serra de Vallivana (pronounced as /ˈsɛra ðe vaʎiˈvana/, Spanish; Castilian: Sierra de Vallivana) or Muntanyes de Vallivana[1] is an over 14km (09miles) long mountain range straddling the Alt Maestrat and Baix Maestrat comarcas, Valencian Community, Spain.

Geography

The highest point of the range is the 1,275 m high Muixacre, located close to the Port de Querol mountain pass in the N-232 road. Other important peaks are Montserrat and Talaió. These mountains are frequently covered in snow in the winter.

This mountain chain rises between the almost abandoned village of Vallivana and the top of the Maestrat mountains, south of the Serra del Turmell and west of the Serra de l'Espadella ranges. These mountains are named after the virgin of Vallivana, the patroness of Morella. The easiest route to reach the range is from Vallivana or from Morella

Ecology

This sparsely-populated mountain area has the most important forested zone of the region[2] with large prey birds such as the griffon vulture and wild animals like Spanish ibex, roe deer and wild boar.

The area of this range together with the neighboring Tinença de Benifassà and Serra del Turmell was declared a Site of Community Importance by the European Union under the name Tinença de Benifassà, Turmell i Vallivana.[3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Vicenç M. Rosselló i Verger, Toponímia, geografia i cartografia
  2. http://www.raco.cat/index.php/MillarsCUCP/article/viewFile/131472/181286 José Quereda Sala, Les Moles de Xert,; Análisis Geomorfológico
  3. http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?pubRef=-//EP//TEXT+WQ+E-2008-5294+0+DOC+XML+V0//EN European Parliament - SCI and ZEPA ‘Tinença de Benifassà, Turmell i Vallivana’