Flat land
Hills
Mountains
The geography of Campania illustrates the geographical characteristics of Campania, a region of Italy .
General data
From the gulfs of Gaeta , Naples , Policastro and Salerno to the most notable elevations of the Campania Apennines , Campania extends over a morphologically very varied territory. To the north it borders Lazio and Molise ; to the east, Apulia and Basilicata , which it also borders to the south; to the west the Tyrrhenian Sea .[ 1]
Areas
From a physical point of view, the Campania region can be divided into two areas: one mountainous and one flat:[ 2]
The mountainous area includes the Campania Apennines , formed by a series of elevations, acrocores and plateaus (of Sannio , of Irpinia and of Cilento ), between which open numerous and easy passes (the most important is the Sella di Ariano ) and there flows the river Calore Irpino (left tributary of the Volturno ) with its tributaries: Ufita ( in the center of the homonymous valley ), Tammaro and Sabato .[ 3]
The flat area is not a single surface, but is divided into many plains divided by many reliefs of the antiappennine ; that is from the volcanic relief of Roccamonfina , of the Campi Flegrei , from Vesuvius and from the chain of Monti Lattari (which constitutes the Sorrento peninsula ).[ 2]
Therefore the flat area is divided into the plains: of Sessa Aurunca ,[ 4] bathed by the river Garigliano ;[ 5] of Capua the widest, crossed by the river Volturno ; of Naples, which surrounds Vesuvius , one of the main Italian volcanoes; the countryside nocerino - sarnese close to the Lattari Mountains; of Paestum which opens onto the Gulf of Salerno and is bathed by the rivers Sele , Calore Lucano and Tanagro ; of Alento which occupies a narrow portion between Monte Stella [ 6] and Monte Gelbison .[ 7]
Coasts and rivers
The coasts of Campania are high and jagged and low and sandy in the plains. The main rivers are: the Volturno , which bathes Capua and flows into the Gulf of Gaeta ; the Sele , which flows into the Gulf of Salerno ; the Garigliano , which flows along the border with Lazio and flows into the Gulf of Gaeta; and the Ofanto , which originates in Irpinia and flows into the Adriatic Sea .[ 1]
Mountains
References