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Cyprus is an island in the Mediterranean Sea, situated in
the Middle East, south of Turkey. The physical setting for
life on the island is dominated by the mountain masses and
the central plain they encompass, the Mesaoria.

The Troodos Mountains cover most of the southern and western
portions of the island and account for roughly half its area.
The narrow Kyrenia Range, extending along the northern coastline,
occupies substantially less area, and elevations are lower.
The two mountain systems run generally parallel to the Taurus
Mountains on the Turkish mainland, whose silhouette is visible
from northern Cyprus. Coastal lowlands, varying in width,
surround the island.
It is situated at the north-eastern end of the East Mediterranean
basin at a distance of 380 kms north of Egypt, 105 kms west
of Syria and 75kms south of Turkey. The Greek mainland is
some 800 kms to the west. The nearest Greek islands are Rhodes
and Karpathos, 380 kms to the west. The latitude of Cyprus
is 34 33 - 35 34 north and its longitude 32 16
- 34 37 east.
Geographic coordinates: 35° N 33° E
Terrain

While the Troodos Mountains are a massif formed of molten
igneous rock, the Kyrenia Range is a narrow limestone ridge
that rises suddenly from the plains. Its easternmost extension
becomes a series of foothills on the Karpas Peninsula. That
peninsula points toward Asia Minor, to which Cyprus belongs
geologically.
Even the highest peaks of the Kyrenia Range are hardly more
than half the height of the great dome of the Troodos massif,
Mount Olympus (1,952 meters), but their seemingly inaccessible,
jagged slopes make them considerably more spectacular. British
writer Lawrence Durrell, in Bitter Lemons, wrote of the Troodos
as "an unlovely jumble of crags and heavyweight rocks"
and of the Kyrenia Range as belonging to "the world of
Gothic Europe, its lofty crags studded with crusader castles."
Rich copper deposits were discovered in antiquity on the
slopes of the Troodos. Geologists speculate that these deposits
may have originally formed under the Mediterranean Sea, as
a consequence of the upwelling of hot, mineral-laded water
through a zone where plates that formed the ocean floor were
pulling apart.
Drainage
Deforestation over the centuries has damaged the island's
drainage system and made access to a year-round supply of
water difficult. A network of winter rivers rises in the Troodos
Mountains and flows out from them in all directions. The Yialias
River and the Pedhieos River flow eastward across the Mesaoria
into Famagusta Bay; the Serraghis River flows northwest through
the Morphou plain. All of the island's rivers, however, are
dry in the summer. An extensive system of dams and waterways
has been constructed to bring water to farming areas.
The Mesaoria is the agricultural heartland of the island,
but its productiveness for wheat and barley depends very much
on winter rainfall; other crops are grown under irrigation.
Little evidence remains that this broad, central plain, open
to the sea at either end, was once covered with rich forests
whose timber was coveted by ancient conquerors for their sailing
vessels. The now-divided capital of the island, Nicosia, lies
in the middle of this central plain.
Climate
Dust storms moving from Middle East countries over Cyprus,
October 19, 2002The Mediterranean climate, warm and rather
dry, with rainfall mainly between November and March, favors
agriculture. In general, the island experiences mild wet winters
and dry hot summers. Variations in temperature and rainfall
are governed by altitude and, to a lesser extent, distance
from the coast.

In summer the island is mainly under the influence of a shallow
trough of low pressure extending from the great continental
depression centred over southwest Asia. It is a season of
high temperatures with almost cloudless skies.
In winter Cyprus is near the track of fairly frequent small
depressions which cross the Mediterranean Sea from west to
east between the continental anticyclone of Eurasia and the
generally low pressure belt of North Africa. These depressions
give periods of disturbed weather usually lasting for a day
or so and produce most of the annual precipitation, the average
rainfall from December to February being about 60% of the
average annual total precipitation for the island as a whole,
which is 500 mm.
The higher mountain areas are cooler and moister than the
rest of the island. They receive the heaviest annual rainfall,
which may be as much as 1,000 millimeters. Sharp frost also
occurs in the higher districts, which are usually blanketed
with snow during the first months of the year. Plains along
the northern coast and in the Karpas Peninsula area average
400 to 450 millimeters of annual rainfall. The least rainfall
occurs in the Mesaoria, with 300 to 400 millimeters a year.
Variability in annual rainfall is characteristic for the island,
however, and droughts are frequent and sometimes severe. Earthquakes,
usually not destructive, occur from time to time.
Summer temperatures are high in the lowlands, even near the
sea, and reach particularly uncomfortable readings in the
Mesaoria. Because of the scorching heat of the lowlands, some
of the villages in the Troodos have developed as resort areas,
with summer as well as winter seasons. The mean annual temperature
for the island as a whole is about 20° C. The amount of
sunshine the island enjoys enhances the tourist industry.
On the Mesaoria in the eastern lowland, for example, there
is bright sunshine 75 percent of the time. During the four
summer months, there is an average of eleven and one-half
hours of sunshine each day, and in the cloudiest winter months
there is an average of five and one-half hours per day.
Area and boundaries
total: 9,250 km² (of which 3,355 km² are
under the administration of the de facto (unrecognized) Turkish
Republic of Northern Cyprus)
land: 9,240 km²
water: 10 km²
Area - comparative: about 0.6 times the size of Connecticut
or 0.7 times the size of Northern Ireland
Land boundaries: 0 km
Coastline: 648 km
Maritime claims:
continental shelf: 200-m depth or to the depth of exploitation
territorial sea: 12 nm
Elevation extremes:
lowest point: Mediterranean Sea 0 m
highest point: Olympus 1,953 m
Resource and land use
Natural resources: copper, pyrites, asbestos, gypsum,
timber, salt, marble, clay earth pigment
Land use:
arable land: 12%
permanent crops: 5%
permanent pastures: 0%
forests and woodland: 13%
other: 70% (1993 est.)
Irrigated land: 400 km² (1999 UN est.)
Environmental concerns
Natural hazards: moderate earthquake activity
Environment - current issues:Water resource problems
(no natural reservoir catchments, seasonal disparity in rainfall,
sea water intrusion to island's largest aquifer, increased
salination in the north); water pollution from sewage and
industrial wastes; coastal degradation; loss of wildlife habitats
from urbanization.
Environment - international agreements:
Party to: Air Pollution, Biodiversity, Climate Change, Climate
Change-Kyoto Protocol, Endangered Species, Environmental Modification,
Hazardous Wastes, Law of the Sea, Marine Dumping, Nuclear
Test Ban, Ozone Layer Protection, Ship Pollution.
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