Catalan Mediterranean System
The Catalan Mediterranean System, also known as Mediterranean System, Transversal Ibero-Pyrenaean System, and Catalanid System,[1] is a wide coastal geographical region in Catalonia. It is made up of a double system of coastal mountain chains: The Catalan Coastal Range and the Catalan Pre-Coastal Range, as well as the Catalan Coastal Depression and other coastal and pre-coastal plains located among those mountain ranges.

Geomorphologic map of Catalonia (The green Southern Zone extends 80 km further south into the Valencian community): 
- Pyrenees
 - Pre-Pyrenees
 - Catalan Central Depression
 - Smaller mountain ranges of the Central Depression
 - Catalan Transversal Range
 - Catalan Pre-Coastal Range
 - Catalan Coastal Range
 - Catalan Coastal Depression and other coastal and pre-coastal plains
 
Geology
    
Geologically the Catalan Mediterranean System is the result of a tectonic uplift, about 300 km long and roughly 50 km wide.
Transversally the system can be divided in three zones:
- Northern Zone, between the Empordà comarca and the Llobregat. This zone is of paleozoic and crystalline composition
 - Central Zone, between rivers Llobregat and Ebre
 - Southern Zone, between the Baix Ebre comarca and the Millars River in the Valencian Community. Both the central and the southern zone are of mesozoic and tertiary composition.
 
References
    
- Josep Guitart i Duran, Maria del Tura Bolòs et al. Història agrària dels Països Catalans (Volum 1) Antiguitat, 2005, ISBN 978-84-475-2895-0
 
External links
    
    
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