Hanušovice Highlands
| Hanušovice Highlands | |
|---|---|
| German: Hannsdorfer Bergland; Polish: Wysoczyzna Hanušowicka; Czech: Hanušovická vrchovina | |
View of the Hanušovice Highlands | |
| Highest point | |
| Peak | Jeřáb |
| Elevation | 1,003 m (3,291 ft) |
| Dimensions | |
| Area | 793 km2 (306 mi2) |
| Geography | |
| Country | Czech Republic |
| Parent range | Sudetes |
The Hanušovice Highlands are a geomorphological mesoregion of the Eastern Sudetes in the northeastern part of the Czech Republic, named after the town of Hanušovice.[1]
Geography
The Hanušovice Highlands lie amid the following sub-ranges of the Sudetes: to the northeast the Hrubý Jeseník, to the southeast the Nízký Jeseník, to the southwest the Mohelnice Depression, to the west the Kłodzko Valley, to the northwest the Králický Sněžník Mountains, and to the north the Golden Mountains.[2] The highlands lie mainly in the Olomouc Region, with a smaller part extending into the Pardubice Region.[1]
The mesoregion has an area of about 793 km² and an average elevation of 527.2 m. Its highest summit is Jeřáb (1003 m).[1]
Geology
The broader region (including the Hanušovice Highlands and adjacent units of the Jeseníky area) is characterized by a complex geological history and widespread metamorphic basement rocks (crystalline rocks).[3]
In regional syntheses for the Olomouc Region, the Hanušovice Highlands are described as being composed largely of crystalline schists and Paleozoic sediments, with Jeřáb as the highest peak.[4]
References
- ^ a b c "Hanušovická vrchovina". cs.wikipedia.org (in Czech). Retrieved 2026-03-03.
- ^ "File:Divisions of the Sudetes.svg". commons.wikimedia.org. Retrieved 2026-03-03.
- ^ "Přírodní poměry (Jeseníky – regional geology overview)". naspicaku.caves.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 2026-03-03.
- ^ Krajská zpráva o inventarizaci kontaminovaných míst – Olomoucký kraj (PDF) (Report) (in Czech). CENIA. Retrieved 2026-03-03.