Cerros de Escazú

Escazú Hills (Spanish: Cerros de Escazú), is a mountain range in San José Province, central Costa Rica.

Geography

The range borders the Costa Rican Central Valley to the south. It is considered the northernmost portion of the Cordillera de Talamanca.

Peaks

The highest peak is Cerro Rabo de Mico with 2,428 m (7,966 ft), followed closely by Cerro Cedral with 2,420 m (7,940 ft). Other relevant mountains include Cerro Pico Alto with 2,353 m (7,720 ft), Cerro Pico Blanco 2,271 m (7,451 ft) and Cerro San Miguel with 2,035 m (6,677 ft).[1]

Settlements

While in San José, these geographic formations can be seen to the south-west. The name is taken from the canton of Escazú, which lies on its northern slopes. Other nearby districts are Santa Ana to the north, Ciudad Colón to the northwest, Tabarcia to the southwest, Palmichal to the southwest, Aserrí to the east and Alajuelita to the northeast. This mountain range lies in various cantons: Escazú, Santa Ana, Mora, Acosta, Aserrí and Alajuelita.

Quitirrisí, located in these hills, is the Native American reserve which lies closest to the capital, San José.

Conservation

Due to its position, this mountain range has several climatic influences that are reflected in the habitat diversity and biodiversity. In an attempt to protect this biological richness but also the local watersheds, the Escazú Hills Protected Zone, the El Rodeo Protected Zone and the Quitirrisí Protected Zone were created.

It is a popular destination for mountain bikers and hikers although there are no clearly marked trails.

gollark: *The MIDI program appears on some anti-DRM blog*
gollark: Just make it hack all their online accounts and delete any file matching its hash on any service known to man.
gollark: Easy enough.
gollark: That way if they try and be evil and copy it they'll stop getting updates unless the HWID matches.
gollark: Ah, the launcher thing could work.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.