- Dinara
-
For other uses, see Dinara (disambiguation).
Dinara
Dinara from Cetina.Elevation 1,913 m (6,276 ft) Listing Country high point Location Location of Dinara in Croatia (on the border with Bosnia and Herzegovina) Location Croatia / Bosnia and Herzegovina Range Dinaric Alps Coordinates 44°03′21.6″N 16°22′51.6″E / 44.056°N 16.381°ECoordinates: 44°03′21.6″N 16°22′51.6″E / 44.056°N 16.381°E Dinara is a mountain located on the border of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. One of its summits, also called Dinara, is the highest point in Croatia at 1,831 m and a prominence of 728 m.[1][2]
Contents
Etymology
Its Latin name is Adrian oros while the current name is suspected to be derived from the name of an ancient Illyrian tribe that lived on the eastern slopes of the mountain.
It is best known for the fact that its name is the base for the name of a large mountain chain called the Dinaric Alps or Dinarides. The Dinarides are known for being composed of karst — limestone rocks — as is the mountain that named them.
Extent
Dinara itself spans from the Derala mountain pass (965 m) in the northwest to the Privija pass (1230 m) which is 20 km to the southeast, where the Kamešnica Mountain begins. The Dinara Mountain is up to 10 km wide.
The highest peaks are Troglav ("Threehead", 1913 m) and Dinara (1831 m).[3] The peak called Dinara is shaped like a human head made of stone, and it happens to be the highest peak of Croatia.
Climate
Dinara is located only a few dozen kilometers away from the Adriatic Sea, and is part of the Dalmatian hinterland, but the climate on Dinara is a much colder, mountain climate, making it one of the coldest places in Croatia with average temperatures between 2 and 4 C at the peaks.[3] The average precipitation is high, while the number of sunny hours per year ranges between 1,700 and 1,900.[3]
There are no inhabited areas on the mountain itself and human presence consists mostly of small shacks that belong to the herdsmen from the nearby valleys such as that of the Cetina river.
Tourism
One of the most fascinating massifs is on the southwestern slope. It is six kilometers long and up to 1700 meters high, providing an interesting landscape for the travelers on the roads in the valley below to view. The massif does not attract many climbers, but its Ošljak peak (1706 m) does.
Fauna
Dinara is host to an endemic species of rodent, the Balkan snow vole (Dolomys bogdanovi longipedis), known in Croatian as the Dinarski miš ("Dinara mouse"). It is an endangered species.
See also
- Troglav, Dinara highest peak
- List of mountains in Croatia
- List of mountains in Bosnia and Herzegovina
References
- ^ "Dinara" on Peakbagger.com Retrieved 1 October 2011
- ^ Geography of Croatia on Europeaklist Gives a topographic prominence of 728 based on an elevation of 1,831 m. Retrieved 1 October 2011
- ^ a b c "Geographical and meteorological data". Statistical Yearbook. Croatian Bureau of Statistics. 2009. http://www.dzs.hr/Hrv_Eng/ljetopis/2009/PDF/01-bind.pdf. Retrieved 2011-09-19.
External links
Categories:- Dinaric Alps
- Mountains of Croatia
- Mountains of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Bosnia and Herzegovina–Croatia border
- International mountains of Europe
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.