Zakros Mountains, Crete

The Zakros Mountains are a mountain range in Lasithi in eastern Crete, Greece. It trends to the northeast from Diaskari Beach in the southwest in the direction of Toplou Monastery near Cape Sidero.

Zakros Mountains
Epano Zakros against the background of the Zakros Mountains across the Zakros Basin from the Coastal Hill Range, East Crete.
Highest point
PeakPlagia[1] or Plagies[2]
Elevation817 m (2,680 ft)[1]
Prominence487 m (1,598 ft)
Isolation14.9 km (9.3 mi) WNW
Coordinates35°03′46″N 26°09′15″E
Naming
Native nameΤα Όρη Ζάκρου (Greek)
Geography
Terrain map of Crete. For a close-up of eastern Crete, expand image.
LocationTrends NE from Diaskari Beach on the southeast coast of Crete toward Toplou Monastery to the east of Siteia on the northeast coast.
CountryHellenic Republic
Region (periphereia)Crete
Regional unit (periphereiakis enotetas)Lasithi

This range are considered to be the east side of the Sitia mountains (Σητειακά βουνά), divided from the west side by the Rema Pentelis ("Pentelis river"), a stream with its valley that flows S-N across most of Crete at that point, entering the Bay of Sitia just east of Sitia. On the west side of the valley are three ranges more or less in a SW-NE line: the Thrypti mountains, the Ornon Mountains, and the Western Siteia Foothills. The four ranges together are considered the Sitia mountains

The 1975 creation of Sitia UNESCO Global Geopark placed much of the Sitia range in the park. It is the major range there, but not the only. The coastal hill range (east coast) also is in it, so the park comprises all of Crete east of the Mochlos-Livari line.

Geography

The mountains are a massif, seen from outside the massif as a wall of mountains. On top the massif are the montane slopes and plateaus of low enough inclination to support pastures, some agriculture or dendriculture, and villages. It is too dry at those altitudes for much greenery; a bare rocky slope is the norm. At lower altitudes is a maquis: shrubs, grass, scattered trees. The canyons, or gorges, are cut deeply into the edges of the massif by runoff from above, a process facilitated by the softness and solubility of limestone. Caves and deep cuts abound.

The massif can be roughly defined by the direction of the ravines coming off of it. On the west side they trend E-W into the Pentelis River Valley. To the north the ravines drain into the Sea of Crete, such as the Toplou Monastery Gorge. To the east the ravines trend W-E intersecting a valley. To the south the ravines trend N-S into th Sea of Libya.

Notes

    Citations

    1. Alexandros Roniotis (2022). "Mountains of Crete: Sitiaka". CretanBeaches.
    2. "Plakies". PeakVisor. Retrieved 27 July 2022.

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