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Location:
Located at the South-East corner of the
Iberian Peninsula, between the regions of
Andalusia, Castile-La Mancha and Valencia,
the region of Murcia occupies an area of
11,317 km2 (2.2% of the total surface area
of Spain), bordering the province of
Albacete in the North, the province of
Alicante in the East, the provinces of
Granada, Albacete and Almería in the West,
and the Mediterranean in the South-East.
In terms of surface area the region of
Murcia is the ninth largest of the Spanish
autonomous communities. The Murcia region
lies at the centre of the Spanish
Mediterranean coastal arch, between the
longitudes 37º 23' - 38º 45'N and the
latitudes 0º 39' - 2º 20'W taking as
reference the Greenwich Meridian.
Climate:
The region of Murcia has the typical
Mediterranean semi-arid subtropical climate:
namely an average annual temperature of 21ºC,
with hot summers (registering absolute
maximum temperatures of 40ºC) and mild
winters (an average temperature of 12ºC in
the winter months of December and January).
The number of days per year with clear skies
is 120-150, with approximately 2,800 sun-hours
per annum. In general rain is scarce
throughout the region (approx. 300-350 mm/year),
falling mainly in the spring (April) and
autumn (October), leaving the summer an
eminently dry season. The region of Murcia
is characterised by certain climatic
differences which may lead to variation in
the above-mentioned figures. These
variations depend on the orientation and
exposure to the dominant winds, the distance
from the sea and the configuration of relief.
Due to these factors, the temperature
differences between the coast and the
interior are much more extreme in the winter.
On the coast temperatures tend never to fall
below 10ºC, whilst inland at higher
altitudes they may not exceed 6ºC. The
latter areas show a higher average annual
rainfall, which reaches 600 mm/yr.
Landscape:
From the geographical point of view, the
region of Murcia stands out because of its
multiple contrasts: dry vs. irrigated land,
plains vs. mountainous areas, coastline vs.
interior, vineyards vs. mesetas, factors
which can no doubt be attributed to its
location in a transitional area between the
Sub-Baetic mountain range and the northern
Sub-Meseta. Morphologically, the relief of
the territory of Murcia falls within the
influence of the Baetic cordilleras and
shows an alternation between mountainous
tracts, valleys and depressions, leading to
extreme contrasts of altitude over short
distances. Of the total surface area, the
majority (approx. 45%) is situated between
the altitudes of 200 - 600 metres; 23% is
less than 200 metres above sea level, and
the remaining 32% lies at altitudes of over
600 metres.
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