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Politica de confidentialitate |
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• domnisoara hus • legume • istoria unui galban • metanol • recapitulare • profitul • caract • comentariu liric • radiolocatia • praslea cel voinic si merele da aur | |
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FRANCE | ||||||
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France (in French, République Française), country in western Europe, bounded on the north by the English Channel, the Strait of Dover, and the North Sea (which separate it from Great Britain); on the north-east by Belgium, Luxembourg, and Germany; on the east by Germany, Switzerland, and Italy; on the south-east by the Mediterranean Sea; on the south by Spain; and on the west by the Bay of Biscay (an arm of the Atlantic Ocean). France is approximately hexagonal in shape, with an extreme length from north to south of about 965 km (600 mi) and a maximum width of about 935 km (580 mi). The capital and largest city is Paris. The republic of France includes ten overseas possessions. These include the overseas departments of French Guiana, in South America; Martinique and Guadeloupe, in the Caribbean; and Réunion, in the Indian Ocean. Territorial collectivities and dependencies include St Pierre and Miquelon, Mayotte, New Caledonia, French Polynesia, the French Southern and Antarctic Territories, and Wallis and Futuna Islands. The total area of metropolitan France, which also includes the island of Corsica in the Mediterranean, is 543,965 sq km (210,026 sq mi). The chief physiographic features of France are its natural eastern and southern
boundaries, a south-central plateau, and, contiguous to the plateau, a vast
region of rolling plains. A series of massive mountain ranges, including a number
of ranges of the Alps and the Jura, form natural boundaries at the Franco-Italian
and most of the Franco-Swiss borders. With flanking chains and foothills, these
ranges dominate the area east of the south-central plateau. Many of the Alpine
mountains extending across and along the French border are more than 3,962 m
(13,000 ft) above sea level; Mont Blanc (4,807 m/15,771 ft) is the second highest
peak on the continent. The Jura, which have a maximum elevation, on the Franco-Swiss
boundary, of about 1,710 m (5,600 ft), delineate the eastern frontier of France
from the eastern extension of the Rhône Valley to the Belfort Gap, the
broad depression linking the basins of the Rhine and the Saône rivers.
From the edge of the Belfort Gap to the north-eastern corner of France, the
Franco-German border is formed by the River Rhine. The Vosges mountains, extending
north from the Belfort Gap, dominate the region between the Moselle and the
Rhine. The highest elevations in the Vosges Mountains reach about 1,435 m (4,700
ft). The Pyrenees, which extend along the Franco-Spanish frontier from the Mediterranean
Sea to the Bay of Biscay, form the other mountain boundary of France. Pic de
Vignemale (3,298 m/10,820 ft) is the highest French peak in the Pyrenees. The
Pyrenees are traversed by few passes, a circumstance that has traditionally
hampered commerce between France and Spain. The Alpine and other ranges in the
east are, however, broken by gaps and passes, notably the passes of St Bernard. l1y21yb |
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