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Dec 15, 2009
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Apennines

Apennines (ăp'unīnz) [key], Ital. Appennino, mountain system, running the entire length of the Italian peninsula. It extends south c.840 mi (1,350 km) from the Cadibona Pass in Liguria, NW Italy, where the Apennines join with the Ligurian Alps, to the Strait of Messina; the mountains of Sicily are a southwest continuation of the system. The Apennines are widest (c.80 mi/130 km) in the central section, which also contains the highest peaks, Mt. Corno (9,560 ft/2,914 m high) and Mt. Amaro (9,170 ft/2,795 m high). However, in general the peaks are much lower. The central and southern Apennines have mineral springs, crater lakes, fumaroles, and volcanoes (two, Vesuvius and Etna, are still active). The southern section also experiences many earthquakes. In 1980 one near Campania left 4800 people dead. Of the many rivers rising in the Apennines, the few important ones (Arno, Tiber, and Volturno) all flow W into the Tyrrhenian Sea. The N and central Apennines are rich in a great variety of minerals. There are many hydroelectric plants in the mountains. The once heavily forested slopes of the system have been greatly reduced by humans through the centuries; attempts at conservation and reforestation have been made. The greatest population concentrations are found in the valleys and the fertile basins. Extensive pasturelands are used for sheep and goat grazing. The Apennines are pierced by many railroad tunnels and highway passes, and by the Appian, Cassian, Flaminian, and Salarian ways (see Roman roads).

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

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Pliocene crustal shortening on the Tyrrhenian side of the northern Apennines: evidence from the Gavorrano antiform (southern Tuscany, Italy) (Journal of the Geological Society)

First results from the CROP-11 deep seismic profile, central Apennines, Italy: evidence of mid-crustal folding (Journal of the Geological Society)

The complete Apennines orogenic cycle preserved in a transient single outcrop near San Fele, Lucania, southern Italy (Journal of the Geological Society)

Classification of Cyclone Tracks over the Apennines and the Adriatic Sea (Monthly Weather Review)

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Reconstruction of continental margin architecture deformed by the contraction of the Lagonegro Basin, southern Apennines, Italy (Journal of the Geological Society)

Extensional detachment faulting on the Tyrrhenian margin of the southern Apennines contractional belt (Italy) (Journal of the Geological Society)

Carbon-isotope stratigraphy of Cenomanian-Turonian platform carbonates from the southern Apennines (Italy): a chemostratigraphic approach to the problem of correlation between shallow-water and deep-water successions (Journal of the Geological Society)

Stacking pattern of cyclic carbonate platform strata: Lower Cretaceous of southern Apennines, Italy (Journal of the Geological Society)

Tree rings used to assess time since death of deadwood of different decay classes in beech and silver fir forests in the central Apennines (Molise, Italy).(Report) (Canadian Journal of Forest Research)

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