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The country consists of a large mainland at the southern
end of the Balkans; the Peloponnesus peninsula (separated
from the mainland by the canal of the Isthmus of Corinth);
and numerous islands (around 3,000), including Crete, Rhodes,
Euboea and the Dodecanese and Cycladic groups of the Aegean
Sea as well as the Ionian sea islands. Greece has more than
15,000 kilometres of coastline and a land boundary of 1,160
kilometres.
About 80% of Greece consists of mountains or hills, thus
making Greece one of the most montainous countries of Europe.
Western Greece contains lakes and wetlands. Pindus, the central
mountain range, has a maximum elevation of 2,636 m. The Pindus
can be considered as a prolongation of the Dinaric Alps. The
range continues by means of the Peloponnese, the islands of
Kythera and Antikythera to find its final point in the island
of Crete. (Actually the islands of the Aegean are peaks of
underwater mountains that once consisted an extension of the
mainland).
The Central and Western Greece area contains high, steep
peaks dissected by many canyons and other karstic landscapes,
including the Meteora and the Vikos gorge the later being
the second largest one on earth after the Grand Canyon in
the US.
Mount Olympus forms the highest point in Greece at 2,919
m above sea level. Also northern Greece presents another high
range, the Rhodope, located in Eastern Macedonia and Thrace;
this area is covered with vast and thick century old forests
like the famous Dadia.
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Greece has many mountains, most famously
Mount Olympus
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Plains are mainly found in Eastern Thessaly, Central Macedonia
and Thrace.
Greece's climate is divided into three well defined classes
the Mediterranean, Alpine and Temperate, the first one features
mild, wet winters and hot, dry summers. Temperatures rarely
reach extremes, although snowfalls do occur occasionally even
in Athens, Cyclades or Crete during the winter. Alpine is
found primarily in Western Greece (Epirus, Central Greece,
Thessaly, Western Macedonia as well as central parts of Peloponessus
like Achaea, Arkadia and parts of Lakonia where the Alpine
range pass by). Finally the temperate climate is found in
Central and Eastern Macedonia as well as in Thrace at places
like Komotini, Xanthi and northern Evros; with cold, damp
winters and hot, dry summers. It's worth to mention that Athens
is located in a transition area between the Mediterranean
and Alpine climate, thus finding that in its southern suburbs
weather is of Mediterranean type while in the Northern suburbs
of the Alpine type.
About 50% of Greek land is covered by forests with a rich
varied vegetation which spans from Alpine coniferous to mediterranean
type vegetation.
Seals, sea turtles and other rare marine life live in the
seas around Greece, while Greece's forests provide a home
to Western Europe's last brown bears and lynx as well as other
species like Wolf, Roe Deer, Wild Goat, Fox and Wild Boar
among others.

Greece has thousands of islands one of
which is Hydra island
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