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Baja California peninsula

The Baja California peninsula (Spanish: Península de Baja California, lit.'Lower California peninsula') is a peninsula in northwestern Mexico. It separates the Gulf of California from the Pacific Ocean. The peninsula extends from Mexicali, Baja California, in the north to Cabo San Lucas, Baja California Sur, in the south.

California peninsula
Satellite image of the Baja California peninsula
Geography
LocationNorthern Mexico
Coordinates28°00′N 113°30′W / 28.000°N 113.500°W / 28.000; -113.500
Adjacent to
Area143,390 km2 (55,360 sq mi)
Administration
Demographics
Population4,567,467 (2020)

With a length of 1,247 km (775 miles), its width ranges from 40 km (25 miles) at its narrowest to 320 km (200 miles) at its widest point and has approximately 3,000 km (1,900 miles) of coastline and approximately 65 islands. The total area of the Baja California peninsula is 143,390 km2 (55,360 sq mi).

The peninsula is separated from mainland Mexico by the Gulf of California and the Colorado River. There are four main desert areas on the peninsula: the San Felipe Desert, the Central Coast Desert, the Vizcaíno Desert, and the Magdalena Plain Desert.

History edit

The name of California existed as a myth among European explorers before it was discovered. The earliest known mention of the idea of California was in the 1510 romance novel Las Sergas de Esplandián by Spanish author Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo. The book described the Island of California as being west of the Indies, "very close to the side of the Terrestrial Paradise; and it is peopled by black women, without any man among them, for they live in the manner of Amazons".[1]

The Baja peninsula was originally believed by the first Spanish sea explorers to be an island, and acquired the name California, after the mythical paradise. Following Hernán Cortés's conquest of Mexico, the search for the fabled Strait of Anián connecting the Atlantic to the Pacific helped motivate him to send several expeditions to the west coast of New Spain in the 1530s and early 1540s. In 1539, explorer Francisco de Ulloa proved that Baja California was a peninsula rather than an island,[2] and named the water separating it from the mainland the "Vermillion Sea" (sometimes referred to as the "Red Sea"). The Spaniards gave the name Las Californias to the peninsula and lands to the north, including both Baja California and Alta California, the region that became parts of the present-day U.S. states of California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, and parts of Colorado and Wyoming.[citation needed] Over time the name "Sea of Cortez" replaced Vermillion Sea, and today the term "Gulf of California" is used by some.[3]

Although cartographers such as Abraham Ortelius showed the Baja as an extensive peninsula in his Theatrum Orbis Terrarum, published in Antwerpen in 1589, and on the map Maris Pacifici from 1589, in the first half of the 17th century the idea of California as an island spread again; this persisted well into the 18th century, and was included in many erroneous maps that did not have the knowledge of the Spanish sailors about the Pacific coast of North America.[4] It is believed to have originated with Carmelite friar Antonio Ascension, who around 1620 drew a map of California depicting it as an island, supposedly on a misconception of reports by Spanish navigators Juan de Fuca and Martin d'Aquilar.[5] A copy of this map was sent to Spain and was seized by the Dutch on its way and then reproduced in the Netherlands, and eventually found its way to Henry Briggs in London who widely disseminated this misinformation. The first printed map showing California as an island was published by Briggs in 1622 (this map was also included in Hakluytus Posthumus by Samuel Purchas, 1625), where it was written that it was sometimes supposed to be a peninsula, but had since been shown by the Dutch to be an island. The idea was warmly accepted by cartographers and presented even in c. 1720 on Carte Nouveelle de la Mer du Sud, published in Amsterdam by Andries and Hendrik de Leth [nl].[6] Garcia and Jorge opined in 2023 that a reason for such a mistake could have originated in the secret in which the Spaniards held their cartography from other European powers' eyes.[7]

The final blow to the notion of California as an island was struck by an influential map created by Italian Jesuit priest Eusebio Kino during his mission in the Pimería Alta. It was titled Paso por tierra a la California y sus confinantes nuevas Naciones y Misiones nuevas de la Compañía de JHS [Jesús] en la América Septentrional ("Overland Passage to California and its Contiguous New Nations and New Missions of the Society of Jesus in Northern America").[8] Originally, in 1695, it depicted California as a peninsula but based on the presence of blue abalone shells (most likely Haliotis fulgens) from the Pacific coast in the Pimería Alta, the information from natives, and his own travels and sightings, Eusebio Kino redrew the map in 1701.[9] The map was printed in 1707 in Hamburg and Leipzig and became one of the best-known maps of northern New Spain. A notable colleague of Eusebio Kino who accompanied him on one of his major travels (in 1694) and acted as the intermediary in the publication of this map and dissemination of Kino's knowledge in Europe was Carniolan priest Marcus Antonius Kappus [es].[10]

Timeline edit

Political divisions edit

 
Mexico in 1854, with Baja California Territory in gray (left)

The province of the Californias was united until 1804, in the Spanish colonial Viceroyalty of New Spain, when it was divided into Alta (upper) and Baja (lower) California.

The two Californias division was kept after Mexican independence in 1821. The Spanish Baja California Province became Mexican Baja California Territory, and remained a separate territory until 1836. In 1836, the Siete Leyes constitutional reforms reunited both Californias in the Departamento de las Californias. After 1848, the Baja California peninsula again became a Mexican territory when Alta California was ceded to the United States (see 1854 map).

In 1931, Baja California Territory was divided into northern and southern territories. In 1952, the "Territory of Baja California Norte" became the 29th State of Mexico as Baja California. In 1974, the "Territory of Baja California Sur" became the 31st state as Baja California Sur.

Baja California edit

 
Isla Partida, which is part of the San Lorenzo Marine Archipelago National Park

The northern part is the state of Baja California. It is sometimes informally referred to as Baja California Norte, to distinguish it from both the Baja California peninsula and the adjacent state Baja California Sur. The citizens of Baja California are named bajacalifornianos ("Lower Californians" in English). Mexicali is the capital.

Baja California Sur edit

 
Port of Cabo San Lucas

The southern part, below 28° north, is the state of Baja California Sur. The citizens of Baja California Sur are named sudcalifornianos ("South Californians" in English). La Paz is its capital.

Geology edit

The Baja California peninsula was once a part of the North American Plate, the tectonic plate of which mainland Mexico remains a part. About 12 to 15 million years ago the East Pacific Rise began cutting into the margin of the North American Plate, initiating the separation of the peninsula from it. Spreading within the Gulf of California consists of short oblique rifts or ridge segments connected by long northwest trending transform faults,[14] which together comprise the Gulf of California Rift Zone. The north end of the rift zone is located in the Brawley seismic zone in the Salton Sea basin between the Imperial Fault and the San Andreas Fault.[14] The Baja California peninsula is now part of the Pacific Plate and is moving with it away from the East Pacific Rise in a north northwestward direction.

Along the coast north of Santa Rosalia, Baja California Sur is a prominent volcanic activity area.

Volcanoes of the peninsula and adjacent islands include:[15]

Researchers from Scripps Institution of Oceanography have found a 2,000-year-old layer of non-decomposed roots, or peat, up to 4 metres (13 ft) under the desert mangroves. The peat layer acts like a sponge for stored atmospheric carbon, a record of sea-level-rise is also recorded in the peat layer.

The desert mangroves restricted to rocky inlets on the rugged coast of Baja California have been growing over their own root remains over thousands of years to compensate for sea-level rise, accumulating a thick layer of peat below their roots. However, mangroves in flat coastal floodplains have accumulated a thinner peat layer.[16]

Geography edit

 
Baja California as seen in April 1984, from the bay of a Space Shuttle (STS-41-C)

The Peninsular Ranges form the backbone of the peninsula. They are an uplifted and eroded Jurassic to Cretaceous batholith, part of the same original batholith chain which formed much of the Sierra Nevada mountains in U.S. California. This chain was formed primarily as a result of the subduction of the Farallon Plate millions of years ago all along the margin of North America.

  • The Sierra de Juárez is the northernmost range in Mexico.
  • The Sierra de San Pedro Mártir runs south of the Sierra de Juárez and includes the peninsula's highest peak, the Picacho del Diablo.
  • The Sierra de San Borja runs south of the Sierra de San Pedro Mártir.
  • The volcanic complex of Tres Vírgenes lies in Baja California Sur, near the border with the state of Baja California, forming the ranges south of the Sierra de San Borja.
  • The Sierra de la Giganta runs along the shore of the Gulf of California south of the Tres Vírgenes complex.
  • At the south end of Baja California Sur, the Sierra de la Laguna forms an isolated mountain range rising to 2,090 metres (6,860 ft)
  • Another isolated range, the Sierra Vizcaino, juts out into the Pacific between Punta Eugenia and Punta Abreojos.

Climate

The climate of Baja California peninsula is predominantly a hot desert climate, with the northern parts featuring a Mediterranean climate, and contains some dots of Mediterranean and hot semi arid climate along all of the peninsula.

The two most prominent capes along the Pacific coastline of the peninsula are Punta Eugenia, located about halfway up the coast, and Cabo San Lázaro, located about a quarter of the way north from Cabo San Lucas.

The Sebastián Vizcaíno Bay, the largest bay in Baja, lies along the Pacific coast halfway up the peninsula. The large Cedros Island is situated between the bay and the Pacific, just north of Punta Eugenia. Onshore southeast of the bay is the Desierto de Vizcaino, an extensive desert lying between the Sierra Vizcaino to the west, and the Tres Virgenes range which runs along the Gulf of California to the east.

The largest bays along the coastline of the Gulf are Bahia de La Paz where the city of La Paz is located, and Bahia Concepcion. The Bahía de los Ángeles is a small bay located west of the Canal de las Ballenas which separates the Baja California peninsula from the large island of Isla Ángel de la Guarda in the Gulf of California.

Ecoregions edit

The peninsula is home to several distinct ecoregions. Most of the peninsula is deserts and xeric shrublands, although pine-oak forests are found in the mountains at the northern and southern ends of the peninsula. The southern tip of the peninsula, which was formerly an island, has many species with affinities to tropical Mexico.

Tourism edit

The peninsula is known colloquially as Baja by American and Canadian tourists, and is known for its natural environment. It draws ecotourists who go whale watching for migrating California gray whales as well as tourists that arrive to the resorts on the southern tip of the peninsula. Its location between the North Pacific and Gulf of California give it a reputation for sports fishing. Since 1967, the peninsula has hosted the Baja 1000, an off-road race that begins in Ensenada and ends in La Paz.

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-05-25. Retrieved 2017-01-31.
  2. ^ "Gulf of California". Encyclopaedia Britannica. 30 August 2023.
  3. ^ "California as Island? The Valk Map in the USC Chronicle | USC Libraries". libraries.usc.edu. Retrieved 2021-04-04.
  4. ^ Jennings, Ken (March 19, 2018). ""For Centuries, Europeans Thought California Was an Island"". Condé Nast Traveler.
  5. ^ Toley, R. V. (1980). The Mapping of America. p. 110.
  6. ^ Nabergoj, Tomaž (2009). "Marko Anton Kappus (1657–1717): misijonar, ki je odkrival Ameriko" [Marcus Antonius Kappus (1657–1717): The Missionary Who Was Discovering the America]. Vigenjc: Glasilo Kovaškega muzeja v Kropi: Rodbina Kappus pl. Pilchstein [Vigenjc: Newsletter of the Blacksmith Museum in Kropa: The Kappus von Pilchstein family] (in Slovenian). Vol. IX. Museums of the Municipality of Radovljica. p. 29–30. ISSN 1580-6529. Retrieved 2023-10-13.
  7. ^ a b Presidio. Soldados del Rey. Garcia Ruiz, Jorge L. (2023) ISBN 979-8378355877
  8. ^ Kino, Eusebio (1701). "Paso por tierra a la California y sus confinantes nuevas Naciones y Misiones nuevas de la Compañía de JHS [Jesús] en la América Septentrional. Descubierto, andado y demarcado por el Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino, jesuita, desde el año de 1698 hasta el de 1701".
  9. ^ Hans, Bertsch (2010). "Las Conchas Azules (The Blue Shells): Father Kino, abalones, and the Island of California" (PDF). The Nautilus. 124 (4): 188–191.
  10. ^ Stanonik, Janez (2007). "Marcus Antonius Kappus: a Reevaluation". Acta neophilologica. 40 (1/2): 61-74. COBISS 35705186.
  11. ^ a b Schmal, John P. (2019-09-14). "Indigenous Baja California: The Rarest of the Rare". Indigenous Mexico. Retrieved 2022-12-17.
  12. ^ Von der Porten, Edward (2019). Ghost Galleon: The Discovery and Archaeology of the San Juanillo on Shores of Baja California. Texas A&M University Press. p. 208.
  13. ^ Barkenbus, Jack, "The Trans-Peninsular Highway: A New Era for Baja California", Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs, Vol. 16, No. 3. (Aug., 1974), pp. 259–273.
  14. ^ a b Alles, David L. "Geology of the Salton Trough" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2012-03-02. Retrieved 2016-12-18.
  15. ^ "Global Volcanism Program | Volcanoes of the World | Volcanoes of México and Central America | México". from the original on 2010-06-14. Retrieved 2010-01-10. Volcanoes of México and Central America
  16. ^ "New Study Shows Desert Mangroves Are Major Source of Carbon Storage | Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego". scripps.ucsd.edu. 2016-03-28. from the original on 2016-04-09. Retrieved 2016-03-30.

Sources edit

    Further reading edit

    • MacDonald, Gregory (2019). Isle of the Amazons In the Vermilion Sea. Kansas City, MO: 39 West Press. ISBN 978-1-946358-14-1. An anthology of writings that describe Baja California, and the Gulf of California, from sources dated from the mid-sixteenth century to present.

    External links edit

    •   Baja California travel guide from Wikivoyage
    •   Works related to Lower California at Wikisource

    baja, california, peninsula, other, uses, baja, california, disambiguation, spanish, península, baja, california, lower, california, peninsula, peninsula, northwestern, mexico, separates, gulf, california, from, pacific, ocean, peninsula, extends, from, mexica. For other uses see Baja California disambiguation The Baja California peninsula Spanish Peninsula de Baja California lit Lower California peninsula is a peninsula in northwestern Mexico It separates the Gulf of California from the Pacific Ocean The peninsula extends from Mexicali Baja California in the north to Cabo San Lucas Baja California Sur in the south California peninsulaSatellite image of the Baja California peninsulaGeographyLocationNorthern MexicoCoordinates28 00 N 113 30 W 28 000 N 113 500 W 28 000 113 500Adjacent toPacific Ocean Gulf of CaliforniaArea143 390 km2 55 360 sq mi Administration MexicoDemographicsPopulation4 567 467 2020 With a length of 1 247 km 775 miles its width ranges from 40 km 25 miles at its narrowest to 320 km 200 miles at its widest point and has approximately 3 000 km 1 900 miles of coastline and approximately 65 islands The total area of the Baja California peninsula is 143 390 km2 55 360 sq mi The peninsula is separated from mainland Mexico by the Gulf of California and the Colorado River There are four main desert areas on the peninsula the San Felipe Desert the Central Coast Desert the Vizcaino Desert and the Magdalena Plain Desert Contents 1 History 1 1 Timeline 2 Political divisions 2 1 Baja California 2 2 Baja California Sur 3 Geology 4 Geography 5 Ecoregions 6 Tourism 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editSee also Etymology of California The name of California existed as a myth among European explorers before it was discovered The earliest known mention of the idea of California was in the 1510 romance novel Las Sergas de Esplandian by Spanish author Garci Rodriguez de Montalvo The book described the Island of California as being west of the Indies very close to the side of the Terrestrial Paradise and it is peopled by black women without any man among them for they live in the manner of Amazons 1 The Baja peninsula was originally believed by the first Spanish sea explorers to be an island and acquired the name California after the mythical paradise Following Hernan Cortes s conquest of Mexico the search for the fabled Strait of Anian connecting the Atlantic to the Pacific helped motivate him to send several expeditions to the west coast of New Spain in the 1530s and early 1540s In 1539 explorer Francisco de Ulloa proved that Baja California was a peninsula rather than an island 2 and named the water separating it from the mainland the Vermillion Sea sometimes referred to as the Red Sea The Spaniards gave the name Las Californias to the peninsula and lands to the north including both Baja California and Alta California the region that became parts of the present day U S states of California Nevada Utah Arizona and parts of Colorado and Wyoming citation needed Over time the name Sea of Cortez replaced Vermillion Sea and today the term Gulf of California is used by some 3 Although cartographers such as Abraham Ortelius showed the Baja as an extensive peninsula in his Theatrum Orbis Terrarum published in Antwerpen in 1589 and on the map Maris Pacifici from 1589 in the first half of the 17th century the idea of California as an island spread again this persisted well into the 18th century and was included in many erroneous maps that did not have the knowledge of the Spanish sailors about the Pacific coast of North America 4 It is believed to have originated with Carmelite friar Antonio Ascension who around 1620 drew a map of California depicting it as an island supposedly on a misconception of reports by Spanish navigators Juan de Fuca and Martin d Aquilar 5 A copy of this map was sent to Spain and was seized by the Dutch on its way and then reproduced in the Netherlands and eventually found its way to Henry Briggs in London who widely disseminated this misinformation The first printed map showing California as an island was published by Briggs in 1622 this map was also included in Hakluytus Posthumus by Samuel Purchas 1625 where it was written that it was sometimes supposed to be a peninsula but had since been shown by the Dutch to be an island The idea was warmly accepted by cartographers and presented even in c 1720 on Carte Nouveelle de la Mer du Sud published in Amsterdam by Andries and Hendrik de Leth nl 6 Garcia and Jorge opined in 2023 that a reason for such a mistake could have originated in the secret in which the Spaniards held their cartography from other European powers eyes 7 The final blow to the notion of California as an island was struck by an influential map created by Italian Jesuit priest Eusebio Kino during his mission in the Pimeria Alta It was titled Paso por tierra a la California y sus confinantes nuevas Naciones y Misiones nuevas de la Compania de JHS Jesus en la America Septentrional Overland Passage to California and its Contiguous New Nations and New Missions of the Society of Jesus in Northern America 8 Originally in 1695 it depicted California as a peninsula but based on the presence of blue abalone shells most likely Haliotis fulgens from the Pacific coast in the Pimeria Alta the information from natives and his own travels and sightings Eusebio Kino redrew the map in 1701 9 The map was printed in 1707 in Hamburg and Leipzig and became one of the best known maps of northern New Spain A notable colleague of Eusebio Kino who accompanied him on one of his major travels in 1694 and acted as the intermediary in the publication of this map and dissemination of Kino s knowledge in Europe was Carniolan priest Marcus Antonius Kappus es 10 Timeline edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message At the time of contact Baja California Norte was primarily inhabited by several indigenous groups belonging to the Yuman language branch of the Hokan linguistic family Other indigenous groups in Baja California at the time of first contact include the Paipai Kumeyaay Kumiai Cochimi Cucapas Cocopa Kiliwa Guaycura Guaicura or Waicuri and Pericu peoples 11 1532 Hernan Cortes sends three ships north along the coast of Mexico in search of the Island of California The three ships disappear without a trace 1533 Cortes sends a follow up mission to search for the lost ships Pilot Fortun Ximenez leads a mutiny and founds a settlement in the Bay of La Paz in today s Baja California before being killed 1539 Francisco de Ulloa explores both coasts confirms the Baja as a peninsula 1539 Domingo del Castillo a cartographer in the Francisco de Ulloa expedition draw his map with an accurate rendering of the peninsula 7 1578 or 1579 The San Juanillo was the Manila galleon which wrecked on a beach at Baja California in late 1578 or early 1579 became the first shipwreck on the coast of the Californias 12 1622 A map by Michiel Colijn of Amsterdam showed California as a peninsula rather than an island Previous maps show the Gulf terminating in its correct location 1690s 1800s Spanish settlement and colonization in lower Las Californias Baja California peninsula the first Spanish missions in Baja California are established by Jesuit missionaries 1701 Explorations by Eusebio Kino expanded knowledge of the Gulf of California coast 1767 Jesuits expelled Franciscans take over the Baja missions 1769 Franciscans go with the Portola expedition to establish new missions in Alta California Control of the existing Baja missions passes to the Dominican Order 1773 Francisco Palou s line demarcates Franciscan and Dominican areas of mission control 1804 Las Californias divided into Alta Upper and Baja Lower California using Palou s line 1810 1821 Mexican War of Independence 1821 First Mexican Empire Baja California Territory established covering Baja California peninsula 1847 The Battle of La Paz and the Siege of La Paz occurs as well as several other engagements 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo cedes Alta California to the United States As a U S territory it receives the California Gold Rush causing increased maritime traffic along the peninsula 1850 California admitted to U S statehood 1853 William Walker with 45 men captures the capital city of La Paz and declares himself President of the Republic of Lower California Mexico forces him to retreat a few months later 1931 The Territory of Baja California is further divided into Northern and Southern territories Territory of Baja California Norte and Territory of Baja California Sur 1952 The North territory becomes the 29th State of Mexico Baja California The southern portion below 28 N remains a federally administered territory 1973 The 1 700 km 1 056 mi long Trans Peninsular Highway Mexican Federal Highway 1 is finished It is the first paved road that spans the entire peninsula The highway was built by the Mexican government to improve Baja California s economy and increase tourism 13 1974 The South territory becomes the 31st State of Mexico Baja California Sur As of 2000 the five most common indigenous languages in Baja are Mixteco Zapoteco Nahuatl Purepecha and Triqui 11 Political divisions editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Mexico in 1854 with Baja California Territory in gray left The province of the Californias was united until 1804 in the Spanish colonial Viceroyalty of New Spain when it was divided into Alta upper and Baja lower California The two Californias division was kept after Mexican independence in 1821 The Spanish Baja California Province became Mexican Baja California Territory and remained a separate territory until 1836 In 1836 the Siete Leyes constitutional reforms reunited both Californias in the Departamento de las Californias After 1848 the Baja California peninsula again became a Mexican territory when Alta California was ceded to the United States see 1854 map In 1931 Baja California Territory was divided into northern and southern territories In 1952 the Territory of Baja California Norte became the 29th State of Mexico as Baja California In 1974 the Territory of Baja California Sur became the 31st state as Baja California Sur Baja California edit nbsp Isla Partida which is part of the San Lorenzo Marine Archipelago National Park The northern part is the state of Baja California It is sometimes informally referred to as Baja California Norte to distinguish it from both the Baja California peninsula and the adjacent state Baja California Sur The citizens of Baja California are named bajacalifornianos Lower Californians in English Mexicali is the capital Baja California Sur edit nbsp Port of Cabo San Lucas The southern part below 28 north is the state of Baja California Sur The citizens of Baja California Sur are named sudcalifornianos South Californians in English La Paz is its capital Geology editSee also Peninsular Ranges The Baja California peninsula was once a part of the North American Plate the tectonic plate of which mainland Mexico remains a part About 12 to 15 million years ago the East Pacific Rise began cutting into the margin of the North American Plate initiating the separation of the peninsula from it Spreading within the Gulf of California consists of short oblique rifts or ridge segments connected by long northwest trending transform faults 14 which together comprise the Gulf of California Rift Zone The north end of the rift zone is located in the Brawley seismic zone in the Salton Sea basin between the Imperial Fault and the San Andreas Fault 14 The Baja California peninsula is now part of the Pacific Plate and is moving with it away from the East Pacific Rise in a north northwestward direction Along the coast north of Santa Rosalia Baja California Sur is a prominent volcanic activity area Volcanoes of the peninsula and adjacent islands include 15 Volcanoes of east central Baja California Cerro Prieto The San Quintin Volcanic Field Isla San Luis Jaraguay volcanic field Coronado Guadalupe San Borja volcanic field El Aguajito Tres Virgenes Isla Tortuga Comondu La Purisima Researchers from Scripps Institution of Oceanography have found a 2 000 year old layer of non decomposed roots or peat up to 4 metres 13 ft under the desert mangroves The peat layer acts like a sponge for stored atmospheric carbon a record of sea level rise is also recorded in the peat layer The desert mangroves restricted to rocky inlets on the rugged coast of Baja California have been growing over their own root remains over thousands of years to compensate for sea level rise accumulating a thick layer of peat below their roots However mangroves in flat coastal floodplains have accumulated a thinner peat layer 16 Geography editSee also Category Natural history of Baja California Sur and Category Geography of Baja California nbsp Baja California as seen in April 1984 from the bay of a Space Shuttle STS 41 C The Peninsular Ranges form the backbone of the peninsula They are an uplifted and eroded Jurassic to Cretaceous batholith part of the same original batholith chain which formed much of the Sierra Nevada mountains in U S California This chain was formed primarily as a result of the subduction of the Farallon Plate millions of years ago all along the margin of North America The Sierra de Juarez is the northernmost range in Mexico The Sierra de San Pedro Martir runs south of the Sierra de Juarez and includes the peninsula s highest peak the Picacho del Diablo The Sierra de San Borja runs south of the Sierra de San Pedro Martir The volcanic complex of Tres Virgenes lies in Baja California Sur near the border with the state of Baja California forming the ranges south of the Sierra de San Borja The Sierra de la Giganta runs along the shore of the Gulf of California south of the Tres Virgenes complex At the south end of Baja California Sur the Sierra de la Laguna forms an isolated mountain range rising to 2 090 metres 6 860 ft Another isolated range the Sierra Vizcaino juts out into the Pacific between Punta Eugenia and Punta Abreojos ClimateThe climate of Baja California peninsula is predominantly a hot desert climate with the northern parts featuring a Mediterranean climate and contains some dots of Mediterranean and hot semi arid climate along all of the peninsula The two most prominent capes along the Pacific coastline of the peninsula are Punta Eugenia located about halfway up the coast and Cabo San Lazaro located about a quarter of the way north from Cabo San Lucas The Sebastian Vizcaino Bay the largest bay in Baja lies along the Pacific coast halfway up the peninsula The large Cedros Island is situated between the bay and the Pacific just north of Punta Eugenia Onshore southeast of the bay is the Desierto de Vizcaino an extensive desert lying between the Sierra Vizcaino to the west and the Tres Virgenes range which runs along the Gulf of California to the east The largest bays along the coastline of the Gulf are Bahia de La Paz where the city of La Paz is located and Bahia Concepcion The Bahia de los Angeles is a small bay located west of the Canal de las Ballenas which separates the Baja California peninsula from the large island of Isla Angel de la Guarda in the Gulf of California Ecoregions editSee also Category Flora of Baja California and Category Flora of Baja California Sur The peninsula is home to several distinct ecoregions Most of the peninsula is deserts and xeric shrublands although pine oak forests are found in the mountains at the northern and southern ends of the peninsula The southern tip of the peninsula which was formerly an island has many species with affinities to tropical Mexico California chaparral and woodlands which covers the Mediterranean climate northwestern corner of the peninsula as well as Cedros and Guadalupe islands Sierra Juarez and San Pedro Martir pine oak forests in the upper reaches of the Sierra Juarez and Sierra San Pedro Martir ranges in the northern peninsula The Sonoran Desert extends into the northeastern portion of the state east of the Sierra Juarez and Sierra San Pedro Martir ranges The Baja California desert extends west of the Peninsular Ranges along the Pacific side of the peninsula for most of its length and includes the El Vizcaino Desert and El Vizcaino Biosphere Reserve The Gulf of California xeric scrub extends along the Gulf of California side of the peninsula for most of its length San Lucan xeric scrub lies in the lowlands of the peninsula s southern tip Sierra de la Laguna dry forests are found on the lower slopes of the Sierra de la Laguna Sierra de la Laguna pine oak forests are found at higher elevations in the Sierra de la Laguna The Bahia de los Angeles Biosphere ReserveTourism editThe peninsula is known colloquially as Baja by American and Canadian tourists and is known for its natural environment It draws ecotourists who go whale watching for migrating California gray whales as well as tourists that arrive to the resorts on the southern tip of the peninsula Its location between the North Pacific and Gulf of California give it a reputation for sports fishing Since 1967 the peninsula has hosted the Baja 1000 an off road race that begins in Ensenada and ends in La Paz See also editFerdinand Konscak Gulf of California Rift Zone Spanish missions in Baja California The CaliforniasReferences editNotes edit Spain s Fantastic Vision and the Mythic Creation of California PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 05 25 Retrieved 2017 01 31 Gulf of California Encyclopaedia Britannica 30 August 2023 California as Island The Valk Map in the USC Chronicle USC Libraries libraries usc edu Retrieved 2021 04 04 Jennings Ken March 19 2018 For Centuries Europeans Thought California Was an Island Conde Nast Traveler Toley R V 1980 The Mapping of America p 110 Nabergoj Tomaz 2009 Marko Anton Kappus 1657 1717 misijonar ki je odkrival Ameriko Marcus Antonius Kappus 1657 1717 The Missionary Who Was Discovering the America Vigenjc Glasilo Kovaskega muzeja v Kropi Rodbina Kappus pl Pilchstein Vigenjc Newsletter of the Blacksmith Museum in Kropa The Kappus von Pilchstein family in Slovenian Vol IX Museums of the Municipality of Radovljica p 29 30 ISSN 1580 6529 Retrieved 2023 10 13 a b Presidio Soldados del Rey Garcia Ruiz Jorge L 2023 ISBN 979 8378355877 Kino Eusebio 1701 Paso por tierra a la California y sus confinantes nuevas Naciones y Misiones nuevas de la Compania de JHS Jesus en la America Septentrional Descubierto andado y demarcado por el Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino jesuita desde el ano de 1698 hasta el de 1701 Hans Bertsch 2010 Las Conchas Azules The Blue Shells Father Kino abalones and the Island of California PDF The Nautilus 124 4 188 191 Stanonik Janez 2007 Marcus Antonius Kappus a Reevaluation Acta neophilologica 40 1 2 61 74 COBISS 35705186 a b Schmal John P 2019 09 14 Indigenous Baja California The Rarest of the Rare Indigenous Mexico Retrieved 2022 12 17 Von der Porten Edward 2019 Ghost Galleon The Discovery and Archaeology of the San Juanillo on Shores of Baja California Texas A amp M University Press p 208 Barkenbus Jack The Trans Peninsular Highway A New Era for Baja California Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs Vol 16 No 3 Aug 1974 pp 259 273 a b Alles David L Geology of the Salton Trough PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2012 03 02 Retrieved 2016 12 18 Global Volcanism Program Volcanoes of the World Volcanoes of Mexico and Central America Mexico Archived from the original on 2010 06 14 Retrieved 2010 01 10 Volcanoes of Mexico and Central America New Study Shows Desert Mangroves Are Major Source of Carbon Storage Scripps Institution of Oceanography UC San Diego scripps ucsd edu 2016 03 28 Archived from the original on 2016 04 09 Retrieved 2016 03 30 Sources edit Baja California State Government HistoryFurther reading editMacDonald Gregory 2019 Isle of the Amazons In the Vermilion Sea Kansas City MO 39 West Press ISBN 978 1 946358 14 1 An anthology of writings that describe Baja California and the Gulf of California from sources dated from the mid sixteenth century to present External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Baja California Peninsula nbsp Baja California travel guide from Wikivoyage nbsp Works related to Lower California at Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baja California peninsula amp oldid 1217047083, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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