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The Pyrenees are a straddling the border of and . They extend nearly from their union with the Cantabrian Mountains to Cap de Creus on the coast, reaching a maximum elevation of at the peak of .Barnolas, A. y Pujalte, V. (2004). «La Cordillera Pirenaica». Vera Torres, J. A. (ed.), ed. Geología de España. Sociedad Geológica de España e Instituto Geológico y Minero de España. pp. 231–343. .

For the most part, the main crest forms a political divide between the states of Spain and France, with the of sandwiched in between. Historically, the Crown of Aragon and the Kingdom of Navarre extended on both sides of the mountain range.Preamble of the "Charter of the Catalan Language"

(1995). 9780004481487, Harper Collins.


Etymology
In , Pyrene is a princess who to the Pyrenees. The says Pyrene is the name of a town in ., Histories 2.33. According to ,, Punica 3.415–441. she was the virgin daughter of , a king in by whom the hero was given during his to steal the cattle of during his famous Labours. Hercules, characteristically drunk and lustful, violates the sacred code of hospitality and rapes his host's daughter. Pyrene gives birth to a serpent and runs away to the woods, afraid that her father will be angry. Alone, she pours out her story to the trees, attracting the attention of wild beasts who tear her to pieces.

After his victory over Geryon, Hercules passes through the kingdom of Bebryx again, finding the girl's lacerated remains. As is often the case in stories of this hero, the sober Hercules responds with heartbroken grief and remorse at the actions of his darker self, and lays Pyrene to rest tenderly, demanding that the surrounding geography join in mourning and preserve her name:Ben Tipping, Exemplary Epic: Silius Italicus' Punica (Oxford University Press, 2010), pp. 20–21 online. "struck by Herculean voice, the mountaintops shudder at the ridges; he kept crying out with a sorrowful noise 'Pyrene!' and all the rock-cliffs and wild-beast haunts echo back 'Pyrene!' ... The mountains hold on to the wept-over name through the ages." Pliny the Elder connects the story of Hercules and Pyrene to , but rejects it as fabulosa, highly fictional.Pliny the Elder, Natural History 3.3.

Other classical sources derived the name from the Greek word for fire, (IPA: ).Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) William Smith, LLD, Ed.[5] According to Greek historian "in ancient times, we are told, certain herdsmen left a fire and the whole area of the mountains was entirely consumed; and due to this fire, since it raged continuously day after day, the surface of the earth was also burned and the mountains, because of what had taken place, were called the Pyrenees.", The Library of History Vol III, 35 [6]


Geography

Political divisions
The Spanish Pyrenees are part of the following provinces, from east to west: , Barcelona, (all in ), (in ), (in ) and (in the Basque Country).

The French Pyrenees are part of the following départements, from east to west: Pyrénées-Orientales (also known as Northern Catalonia), , Ariège, , Hautes-Pyrénées, and Pyrénées-Atlantiques (the latter two of which include the Pyrenees National Park).

The independent principality of is sandwiched in the eastern portion of the mountain range between the Spanish Pyrenees and French Pyrenees.


Physiographical divisions
Physiographically, the Pyrenees may be divided into three sections: the Atlantic (or Western), the Central, and the Eastern Pyrenees. Together, they form a distinct physiographic province of the larger Alpine System division.

In the Western Pyrenees, from the near the Bay of Biscay of the Atlantic Ocean, the average elevation gradually increases from west to east.

The Central Pyrenees extend eastward from the pass to the , and they include the highest summits of this range:

In the Eastern Pyrenees, with the exception of one break at the eastern extremity of the Pyrénées Ariégeoises in the Ariège area, the mean elevation is remarkably uniform until a sudden decline occurs in the easternmost portion of the chain known as the Albères.


Foothills
Most of the Pyrenees are on the Spanish side, where there is a large and complex system of ranges stretching from Spanish , across northern Aragon and into Catalonia, almost reaching the coast with summits reaching . Pirineus-Prepirineus At the eastern end on the southern side lies a distinct area known as the .Jordi Sacasas i Lluís, Geografia de Catalunya, Publicacions L'Abadia de Montserrat.

On the French side the slopes of the main range descend abruptly and there are no foothills except in the Corbières Massif in the northeastern corner of the mountain system.Christophe Neff : Les Corbières maritimes – forment-elles un étage de végétation méditerranéenne thermophile masqué par la pression humaine ? In: Eric Fouache (Edit.): The Mediterranean World Environment and History. IAG Working Group on Geo-archeology, Symposium Proceedings. Environmental Dynamics and History in Mediterranean Areas, Paris, Université de Paris – Sorbonne 24 – 26 avril 2002. Paris, 2003, 191 – 202, (Elsevier France, ).


Geology
The Pyrenees are older than the : their were first deposited in coastal basins during the and eras. During to times, Pyrenees were located at the Northwest margin of , where they formed a lateral continuity of neighbouring areas, such as the and the massifs and Southwestern territory of . Between 100 and 150 million years ago, during the Early Period, the Bay of Biscay fanned out, pushing present-day Spain against France and applying intense compressional pressure to large layers of . The intense pressure and uplifting of the Earth's crust first affected the eastern part and moved progressively to the entire chain, culminating in the Epoch.

The eastern part of the Pyrenees consists largely of and rocks, while in the western part the granite peaks are flanked by layers of . The massive and unworn character of the chain comes from its abundance of granite, which is particularly resistant to , as well as weak development.

The upper parts of the Pyrenees contain low-relief surfaces forming a . This peneplain originated no earlier than in times. Presumably it formed at height as extensive sedimentation raised the local considerably.


Landscape
Conspicuous features of Pyrenean scenery are:
  • the absence of great lakes, such as those that fill the lateral valleys of the Alps
  • the rarity and relative high elevation of usable
  • the large number of the mountain torrents locally called gaves, which often form lofty , surpassed in Europe only by those of
  • the frequency with which the upper end of a valley assumes the form of a semicircle of precipitous cliffs, called a .

The highest is (462 m or 1,515 ft), at the head of the Gave de Pau; the Cirque de Gavarnie, in the same valley, together with the nearby Cirque de Troumouse and Cirque d'Estaubé, are notable examples of the formation.

Low passes are lacking, and the principal roads and the railroads between France and Spain run only in the lowlands at the western and eastern ends of the Pyrenees, near sea level. The main passes of note are:

  • Col de la Perche (), towards the east, between the valley of the Têt and the valley of the ,
  • Col de Puymorens (), on European route E09 between France and Spain.
  • The nearby Pas de la Casa or Port d'Envalira, the highest road pass in the Pyrenees at , and one of the highest points of the European road network, which provides the route from France to Andorra,
  • The Port de la Bonaigua (), in the middle of the range at the head of the Aran Valley.
  • Plan de Beret ()
  • Col du Pourtalet ().
  • The Col de or Port de Canfranc (), where there were old .
  • Col de la Pierre St Martin ()
  • Puerto de Larrau ()
  • The (), entirely in (Spain) is an important point on the Camino de Santiago pilgrimage route.
Because of the lack of low passes a number of tunnels have been created, beneath the passes at Somport, Envalira, and Puymorens and new routes in the center of the range at and .

A notable visual feature of this is La Brèche de Roland, a gap in the ridge line, whichaccording to legendwas created by .


Natural resources
The metallic of the Pyrenees are not in general of much importance now, though there were mines at several locations in Andorra, as well as at in Ariège, and the foot of Canigó in Pyrénées-Orientales long ago. deposits capable of being profitably worked are situated chiefly on the Spanish slopes, but the French side has beds of . The open pit of Trimoun near the commune of (Ariège) is one of the greatest sources of in Europe.

There are many marble quarries in the Pyrenees, most of which were opened by the Romans in ancient times. Quarried intermittently, they provided prestigious marbles such as Grand Antique (used in Rome and Constantinople by the Romans), statuary white marbles as well as coloured marbles used to decorate the royal palaces of the Louvre and Versailles in France and the Royal Palace of Madrid in Spain.Pascal Julien, Marbres, de carrières en palais (Marbles, from quarries to palaces), Le Bec en l'air editor, 2006.María Luisa Tárraga Baldó, Marble in the Palace of Madrid's decoration: Origins and impacts , Bulletin du Centre de recherche du château de Versailles (Bulletin of the Research Centre of the Château de Versailles), 2013.

are abundant and remarkable, and especially noteworthy are the . The hot springs, among which those of in Andorra, and Lles in Spain, , Bagnères-de-Luchon and in France may be mentioned, are and mostly situated high, near the contact of the granite with the stratified rocks. The lower springs, such as those of Bagnères-de-Bigorre (Hautes-Pyrénées), (), and Campagne-sur-Aude (Aude), are mostly selenitic and not hot.


Climate
The amount of the range receives, including rain and snow, is much greater in the western than in the eastern Pyrenees because of the moist air that blows in from the Atlantic Ocean over the Bay of Biscay. After dropping its moisture over the western and central Pyrenees, the air is left dry over the eastern Pyrenees. The winter average temperature is .

Sections of the mountain range vary in more than one respect. There are some in the western and snowy central Pyrenees, but there are no glaciers in the eastern Pyrenees because there is insufficient snowfall to cause their development. Glaciers are confined to the northern slopes of the central Pyrenees, and do not descend, like those of the Alps, far down into the valleys but rather have their greatest lengths along the direction of the mountain chain. They form, in fact, in a narrow zone near the crest of the highest mountains. Here, as in the other great mountain ranges of central Europe, there is substantial evidence of a much wider expanse of glaciation during the . The best evidence of this is in the valley of Argeles Gazost, between Lourdes and Gavarnie, in the département of Hautes-Pyrénées.

The annual snow-line varies in different parts of the Pyrenees from about above sea level. In average the seasonal snow is observed at least 50% of the time above between December and April.


Flora and fauna

Flora
A still more marked effect of the preponderance of rainfall in the western half of the chain is seen in the vegetation. The lower mountains in the extreme west are wooded, but the extent of forest declines as one moves eastwards. The eastern Pyrenees are peculiarly wild and barren, all the more since it is in this part of the chain that granitic masses prevail. Also moving from west to east, there is a change in the composition of the flora, with the change becoming most evident as one passes the centre of the mountain chain from which point the Corbières Massif stretch north-eastwards towards the central plateau of France. Though the difference in latitude is only about 1°, in the west the flora resembles that of central Europe while in the east it is distinctly Mediterranean in character. The Pyrenees are nearly as rich in species as the Alps, and among the most remarkable instances of that is the occurrence of the monotypic genus (family ), which grows only on a high alpine pass between the Val d'Eynes and . Other examples include , Bulbocodium vernum, and Ranunculus glacialis. The genus most abundantly represented in the range is that of the , several species of which are endemic here.


Fauna
In their the Pyrenees present some striking instances of . The is found only in some of the streams of the northern slopes of these mountains; the only other , the , is confined to the river basin in southern Russia, Kazakhstan and Ukraine. The Pyrenean brook salamander ( Calotriton asper), an endemic amphibian, also lives in streams and lakes located at high altitudes. Among other peculiarities of Pyrenean fauna are blind insects in the of Ariège, the principal genera of which are and Adelops.

The , an endemic subspecies of the , became extinct in January 2000; another subspecies, the western Spanish ibex, was introduced into the area, with the population numbering over 400 individuals as of 2020. The native population was hunted to near-extinction in the 1990s, but its numbers rebounded in 1996 when three bears were brought from . The bear population has bred successfully, and there are now believed to be about 15 brown bears in the central region around Fos, with only four native ones still living in the .


Protected areas
Principal nature reserves and national parks:
  • Ordesa y Monte Perdido National Park (Spain)
  • Pyrénées National Park (France)
  • Aigüestortes i Estany de Sant Maurici National Park (Spain)
  • Posets-Maladeta Natural Park (Spain)

In 1997, part of the Pyrenees (including Ordesa y Monte Perdido National Park and Pyrenees National Park) was inscribed on the World Heritage List for its spectacular geologic landforms and testimony to the unique "" agricultural system.


Demographics and culture
The Pyrenean region possesses a varied ethnology, and history: see ; ; Ariège; Basque Country; Béarn; ; ; . For their history, see also , .

The principal languages spoken in the area are Spanish, French, Aragonese, (in and in Northern and Southern Catalonia), and . Also spoken, to a lesser degree, is the , consisting of the and dialects in France and the dialect in the .

An important feature of rural life in the Pyrenees is '', the moving of livestock from the farms in the valleys up to the higher grounds of the mountains for the summer. In this way the farming communities could keep larger herds than the lowland farms could support on their own. The principal animals moved were and , but historically most members of farming families also moved to the higher pastures along with their animals, so they also took with them , and . Transhumance thus took the form of a mass biannual migration, moving uphill in May or June and returning to the farms in September or October. During the summer period, the families would live in basic stone cabins in the high mountains.

Nowadays, industrialisation and changing agriculture practices have diminished the custom. However, the importance of transhumance continues to be recognised through its celebration in popular festivals.


Scientific facilities

Pic du Midi Observatory
The Pic du Midi Observatory is an astronomical observatory located at 2877 metres on top of the Pic du Midi de Bigorre in the French Pyrenees. Construction of the observatory began in 1878 and the 8-metre dome was completed in 1908.

The observatory housed a powerful mechanical equatorial reflector which was used in 1909 to formally discredit the Martian canal theory. A telescope was installed in 1963, funded by and was used to take detailed photographs of the surface of the Moon in preparation for the Apollo missions. Other studies conducted in 1965 provided a detailed analysis of the composition of the atmospheres on Mars and Venus, this served as a basis for Jet Propulsion Laboratory scientists to predict that these planets had no life.

Since 1980, the observatory has had a 2-metre telescope, which is the largest telescope in France. Overtaken by the giant telescopes built in recent decades, today the observatory is widely open to amateur astronomy.


Odeillo solar furnace
The Odeillo solar furnace is the world's largest solar furnace. It is situated in Font-Romeu-Odeillo-Via, in the department of Pyrénées-Orientales, in south of France. Built between 1962 and 1968, it is and wide, and includes 63 heliostats. The site was chosen because of the length and the quality of sunshine with direct light (more than 2,500 h/year) and the purity of its atmosphere (high elevation and low average humidity).

This furnace serves as a science research site studying materials at very high temperatures. Temperatures above can be obtained in a few seconds; in addition, it provides rapid temperature changes and therefore allows studying the effect of thermal shocks.


Urban areas
There are two roads each side of the mountains: the E15 road (parallel with the railway tunnel) near the Mediterranean end and the E5/E70/E80 road on the opposite end, both having opened in the 1970s. No big cities are in the range itself. The largest urban area close to the Pyrenees is (), with a population of 1,330,954 in its metropolitan area. On the Spanish side () is the closest city, with a population of 319,208 in its metropolitan area. Inside the Pyrenees the main towns are Andorra la Vella (22,256) and Escaldes-Engordany (14,367) in Andorra, (12,813), La Seu d'Urgell (12,252) and (10,773) in Spain, and (13,976), Saint-Gaudens (11,869) and (10,046) in France.


Highest summits
The following is the complete list of the summits of the Pyrenees above 3,000 metres:

  1. (3,404 m) (Aragon)
  2. (3,375 m) (Aragon)
  3. (3,355 m) (Aragon)
  4. Punta de Astorg (3,355 m) (Aragon)
  5. (3,350 m) (Aragon)
  6. Espalda del Aneto (3,350 m) (Aragon)
  7. Pico del Medio (3,346 m) (Aragon)
  8. (3,332 m) (Aragon)
  9. Cilindro de Marboré (3,325 m) (Aragon)
  10. (3,312 m) (Aragon)
  11. (3,298 m) (Aragon-France)
  12. (3,293 m) (Aragon)
  13. (3,290 m) (Aragon)
  14. Clot de la Hount (3,289 m) (Aragon-France)
  15. Soum de Ramond (3,259 m) (Aragon)
  16. 1st Western Peak Maladeta (3,254 m) (Aragon)
  17. Pic de Marboré (3,252 m) (Aragon-France)
  18. (3,247 m) (Aragon-France)
  19. (3,221 m) (Aragon-France)
  20. 2nd Western Peak Maladeta (3,220 m) (Aragon)
  21. Pic de Montferrat (3,219 m) (Aragon-France)
  22. (3,205 m) (Aragon)
  23. Pointe Chausenque (3,204 m) (France)
  24. Piton Carré (3,197 m) (France)
  25. (3,192 m) (France)
  26. 3rd Western Peak Maladeta (3,185 m) (Aragon)
  27. (3,177 m) (Aragon-France)
  28. (3,173 m) (France)
  29. Pic de la cascade oriental (3,161 m) (Aragon-France)
  30. Les Jumeaux Ravier (3,160 m) (Aragon)
  31. (3,160 m) (Aragon-France)
  32. (3,150 m) (France)
  33. Balaïtous (3,144 m) (Aragon-France)
  34. Pic du Taillon (3,144 m) (Aragon-France)
  35. Pica d'Estats (3,143 m) (Catalonia-France)
  36. Punta del Sabre (3,136 m) (Aragon)
  37. Diente de Alba (3,136 m) (Aragon)
  38. Pic de la Munia (3,134 m) (Aragon-France)
  39. Pointe de Literole (3,132 m) (Aragon-France)
  40. (3,131 m) (Catalonia-France)
  41. Pic du Milieu (3,130 m) (Aragon-France)
  42. Pic des Gourgs Blancs (3,129 m) (Aragon-France)
  43. (3,125 m) (Aragon)
  44. (3,121 m) (Aragon)
  45. Pic de Royo (3,121 m) (Aragon-France)
  46. (3,120 m) (Aragon-France)
  47. (3,118 m) (Aragon)
  48. Pic des Crabioules (3,116 m) (Aragon-France)
  49. Seil Dera Baquo (3,110 m) (Aragon-France)
  50. Pic de Maupas (3,109 m) (Aragon-France)
  51. Pic Lézat (3,107 m) (France)
  52. Western Crabioules (3,106 m) (Aragon-France)
  53. (3,106 m) (Aragon-France)
  54. Pic de la cascade occidental (3,095 m) (Aragon-France)
  55. Pic de Néouvielle (3,091 m) (France)
  56. (3,090 m) (Aragon-France)
  57. Pic de Troumouse (3,085 m) (Aragon-France)
  58. (3,085 m) (Aragon)
  59. (3,083 m) (Aragon)
  60. Pics d'Enfer (3,082 m) (France)
  61. Pico de Bardamina (3,079 m) (Aragon)
  62. Pic de la Paul (3,078 m) (Aragon)
  63. Pic de Montcalm (3,077 m) (France)
  64. Infierno oriental (3,076 m) (Aragon)
  65. (3,074 m) (France)
  66. Infierno occidental (3,073 m) (Aragon)
  67. Épaule du Marboré (3,073 m) (Aragon-France)
  68. Pic du port de Sullo (3,072 m) (Catalonia-France)
  69. (3,071 m) (Aragon)
  70. Grand pic d' Astazou (3,071 m) (Aragon-France)
  71. Pico de Vallibierna (3,067 m) (Aragon)
  72. Pico Marcos Feliu (3,067 m) (Aragon-France)
  73. Pic des Spijeoles (3,066 m) (France)
  74. Pico Jean Arlaud (3,065 m) (Aragon)
  75. Tuca de Culebras (3,062 m) (Aragon-France)
  76. (3,060 m) (France)
  77. (3,058 m) (France)
  78. Pico Gran Eriste (3,053 m) (Aragon)
  79. (3,051 m) (Aragon)
  80. Pic du Portillon (3,050 m) (Aragon-France)
  81. (3,046 m) (Aragon)
  82. (3,045 m) (Aragon)
  83. Pic de Eristé sur (3,045 m) (Aragon)
  84. (3,043 m) (France)
  85. Trois Conseillers (3,039 m) (France)
  86. Pico Aragüells (3,037 m) (Aragon)
  87. (3,036 m) (Aragon)
  88. Turon de Néouvielle (3,035 m) (France)
  89. Pic de Batoua (3,034 m) (Aragon)
  90. Gabietou occidental (3,034 m) (Aragon-France)
  91. (3,033 m) (Catalonia)
  92. (3,032 m) (France)
  93. Gabietou oriental (3,031 m) (Aragon-France)
  94. Pic de Bugarret (3,031 m) (France)
  95. South Besiberri Massif (3,030 m) (Catalonia)
  96. Pic de l'Abeille (3,029 m) (Aragon-France)
  97. (3,026 m) (Aragon)
  98. Pic Béraldi (3,025 m) (Aragon)
  99. Pico de la Pez (3,024 m) (Aragon)
  100. Pic de Lustou (3,023 m) (France)
  101. (3,022 m) (France)
  102. Pic de Crabounouse (3,021 m) (France)
  103. Pico de Clarabide (3,020 m) (Aragon-France)
  104. Pico del puerto de la pez (3,018 m) (Aragon-France)
  105. Dent d'Estibère male (3,017 m) (France)
  106. North Besiberri Massif (3,014 m) (Catalonia)
  107. Punta Alta Massif (3,014 m) (Catalonia)
  108. (3,012 m) (Aragon-France)
  109. (3,011 m) (France)
  110. Pico de Gias (3,011 m) (Aragon)
  111. Tuc de Molières (3,010 m) (Catalonia-Aragon)
  112. Tour du Marboré (3,009 m) (Aragon-France)
  113. (3,008 m) (France)
  114. (3,007 m) (Aragon)
  115. Pic d'Estaragne (3,006 m) (France)
  116. Pico de Boum (3,006 m) (Aragon-France)
  117. Casque du Marboré (3,006 m) (Aragon-France)
  118. (3,006 m) (Aragon)
  119. (3,005 m) (Aragon-France)
  120. Pico Robiñera (3,005 m) (Aragon)
  121. Pic de Saint Saud (3,003 m) (France)
  122. Middle Besiberri S (3,003 m) (Catalonia)
  123. Middle Besiberri N (3,002 m) (Catalonia)
  124. Pointe Célestin Passet (3,002 m) (Catalonia)
  125. Punta de las Olas (3,002 m) (Aragon)
  126. (3,001 m) (Aragon)


Notable summits below 3,000 metres
File:Gentau Pic du Midi Ossau.jpg|Pic du Midi d'Ossau reflected in the File:Lac Ansabere01-Aspe-4643~2015 07 28.JPG|Aiguilles d'Ansabère and Mesa de los Tres Reyes reflected in the lake of Ansabère File:Gavarnie recti small Wikimedia Commons.jpg|Gavarnie File:Toulouse - Vue sur les Pyrénées.jpg|

  • Pic de Palas (2,974 m)
  • (2,942 m) - highest point of
  • (2,921 m)
  • (2,913 m)
  • (2,912 m)
  • Pic de Sanfonts (2,894 m)
  • Pic d'Envalira (2,827 m)
  • (2,886 m)
  • Pic du Midi d'Ossau (2,885 m)
  • Pic du Midi de Bigorre (2,876 m)
  • (2,838 m)
  • Petit Pic du Midi d'Ossau (2,812 m)
  • Pic du Canigó (2,786 m)
  • Peña Telera (2,764 m)
  • (2,740 m)
  • Cambre d'Aze (2.726 m)
  • Cap de la cometa del forn (2,691 m) 1 of 3 summits ( archive)
  • (2,668 m)
  • Pic del Port Vell (2,655 m)
  • (2,645 m)
  • Pic dels Aspres (2,562 m)
  • (2,506 m)
  • Pic d'Anie (2,504 m)
  • Pic de Pedraforca (2,498 m)
  • Pique d'Endron (2,472 m)
  • Pic de Madrès (2,469 m)
  • Mesa de los Tres Reyes (2,428 m)
  • Grande Aiguille d'Ansabère (2,376 m)
  • Pic du Soularac (2,368 m)
  • Pic du Saint Barthélémy (2,348 m)
  • Peña Montañesa (2,291 m)
  • Peña Foratata (2,282 m)
  • Pic des Trois Seigneurs (2,199 m)
  • Pic d'Orhy (2,017 m)
  • (1,935 m)
  • (1,922 m)
  • Pic de Cagire (1,912 m)
  • Pic du Gar (1,785 m)
  • (1,419 m)
  • (905 m)
  • (897 m)


Sports and leisure
Both sides of the Pyrenees are popular spots for winter sports such as and . The Pyrenees are also a good place for athletes to do high-elevation training in the summer, such as by bicycling and cross-country running.

In the and the , the Pyrenees are usually featured in two of cycling's grand tours, the Tour de France held annually in July and the Vuelta a España held in September. The stages held in the Pyrenees are often crucial legs of both tours, drawing hundreds of thousands of spectators to the region.

Three main long-distance footpaths run the length of the mountain range: the GR 10 across the northern slopes, the GR 11 across the southern slopes, and the HRP which traverses peaks and ridges along a high elevation route. In addition, there are numerous marked and unmarked trails throughout the region.

Pirena is a dog- competition held in the Pyrenees.


Ski resorts
resorts in the Pyrenees include:


See also


Notes

Further reading


External links

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