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Mountains

  1. Andes

    The Andes are one of the highest mountain ranges in the world, stretching 4,500 miles from north to south and up to 300 miles wide in some parts.

  2. Atlas Mountains

    The Atlas Mountains are in northwest Africa covering Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia. The two highest peaks are in Morocco - Mount Toubkal and Mount M'Goun.

  3. Cotopaxi National Park

    Situated about 40 miles south of Quito in the “Avenue of Volcanoes”, Cotopaxi National Park was founded in 1979 and covers about 33,500 hectares.

  4. Drakensberg Mountains

    The dramatic mountain range of the Drakensberg curves around the border between KwaZulu Natal and Lesotho. They are the highest mountains in southern Africa. It is wild and rugged here, with spectacular scenery and it is a paradise for hikers.

  5. Himalayas

    The Himalayas is one of the world’s most impressive mountain ranges. The scenery is spectacular with vistas of snow-capped mountains, and razor-edged ridges framing gorgeous valleys. It is a region with huge opportunities for a great holiday which could be taken either in Nepal or India.

  6. Mount Kenya

    Mount Kenya is the highest mountain in Kenya, and the second-highest in Africa (after Mount Kilimanjaro). It is just south of the equator, and protected in a national park.

  7. Mount Kilimanjaro

    Mount Kilimanjaro is the crown of Tanzania and the highest mountain in Africa.

  8. Mount Meru

    Mount Meru (4,566 metres) is an active volcano situated 70 kilometres west of Mount Kilimanjaro. Though it is small in comparison with Kilimanjaro, Meru is equally spectacular, with slopes that rise up at incredibly steep angles. It is the second highest peak in Tanzania.

  9. Mount Mulanje

    The Mulanje Massif, also known as Mount Mulanje, is the third highest mountain in southern Malawi near the city of Blantyre, rising sharply from the surrounding plains and the tea-growing estates.

  10. Sacred Valley of the Incas

    The Sacred Valley had symbolic importance, being the terrestrial equivalent of the Milky Way and also contains some of the most fertile and flattest land for the production of the staple Andean cereal, maize.

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