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The Tell Atlas (Arabic: الاطلس التلي) is a mountain chain over 1,500 kilometers in length, belonging to the Atlas mountain ranges in North Africa, stretching from Morocco, through Algeria to Tunisia. It parallels the Mediterranean coast. Together with the Saharian Atlas or Aurès Mountains range to the south it forms the northernmost of two more or less parallel ranges which approach one another towards the east, remaining quite distinct from one another in Western Algeria and merging in Eastern Algeria. At the western end, it ends at the Rif and Middle Atlas ranges in Morocco. The Tell Atlas are also a distinct physiographic section of the larger Atlas Mountains province, which in turn is part of the larger African Alpine System physiographic division.
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Climate
The Tell Atlas enjoys a typical Mediterranean climate (warm, dry summers and mild, rainy winters with snow at upper elevations). As a consequence, the northern slopes of the Tell Atlas are forested with cedar, pine, and cork oak. In the summer a hot, dry wind, the Sirocco, blows north from the Sahara across the Tell Atlas, causing dusty, dry conditions along the northern coast of Africa.
Between the Tell Atlas and the Saharan Atlas
It forms a natural barrier between the Mediterranean and the Sahara. Its highest summit lies 2,308 meters over the sea level. Between the two natural barriers (the first against the Mediterranean and the second against the Sahara) lies the valley of the Chelif and various lesser rivers. South of the Tell Atlas is a high plateau (~1000 m in elevation) with level terrain where water collects during the wet season, forming large shallow salt lakes (and as they dry, salt flats). Agriculture includes grazing of sheep and goats on grass in better-watered high plateau areas and some farming; dry-land barley is grown there. Only seasonal streams are found flowing south from the Tell Atlas.
Cities on the Tell Atlas
Several large cities such as the Algerian capital, Algiers, with ~1,500,000 residents (2005) and Oran with ~770,000 residents (2005) lie at the base of the Tell Atlas. The Algerian city Constantine with approximately 505,000 residents (2005) lies 80 km inland and directly in the mountains at 650 meters in elevation.
Lakes and rivers
The Chelif is a 725 km long river with headwaters in the Tell Atlas to its discharge into the Mediterranean. The Chelif is characterized by an extremely fertile valley.
References and notes
Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 18 September 2008, at 23:57.
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