Montes Universales

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Montes Universales
File:Vega del Tajo.JPG
View of the Montes Universales near Guadalaviar town
Highest point
Elevation Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value).
Listing List of mountains in Aragon
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Geography
Montes Universales is located in Spain
Montes Universales
Montes Universales
Spain
Location Sierra de Albarracín Comarca, Aragon
Parent range Iberian System, Southern zone
Geology
Mountain type Karstic (Mesozoic)
Climbing
Easiest route From the towns of Guadalaviar or Villar del Cobo

Montes Universales is a 32 km (20 mi) long mountain range in the southwestern end of the Iberian System. Its highest point is the 1,935 m high summit known as Caimodorro. The 1,830 m high Muela de San Juan is another important peak.

Administratively the Montes Universales belong to the Sierra de Albarracín comarca of Aragon, therefore there are often confused with the geographical Sierra de Albarracín mountain range.[1]

Geography

The range is aligned in a NW - SE direction and is not as high as neighboring mountain ranges. It is, however, very significant from the hydrographic point of view for important rivers of the Iberian Peninsula have their source in these mountains, which divide the Atlantic from the Mediterranean watershed. Among the Iberian rivers that originate in the Montes Universales the most important are Tagus on the western slopes, and the Túria, Cabriel and Xúquer on the eastern.

The Montes Universales limit on the northeast with the paleozoic massifs of Caimodorro and Loma Alta, in the southeast with the Serranía de Cuenca and with the Sierra de Jabalón and the Túria Valley in the east.

Flora and fauna

These mountains are covered with mostly not very dense clumps of pine, oak and Iberian Juniper (Juniperus thurifera) forest.

Radiocarbon samples from Ojos del Tremedal show that birches, now almost absent from these mountains, were very common in the Montes Universales during the ice age around 9,600 years ago. Signs of human interference with the vegetation have been detected beginning from about 3,500 years before.[2]

Erebia zapateri is an endemic butterfly of these mountains.[3]

Features

Villar del Cobo village under the Montes Universales during a winter snowstorm 
Montes Universales. The Turia River in the stretch known as Guadalaviar River until Teruel city. 

See also

References

External links