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Geography of Poland
Poland is a country in Central Europe, east of
Germany. Generally speaking, Poland is an unbroken
plain reaching from the Baltic Sea in the north to
the Carpathian Mountains in the south. Within that
plain, terrain variations generally run in bands
from east to west.
The Baltic coast lacks natural harbors except for
the Gdańsk-Gdynia region and Szczecin in the far
northwest. The northeastern region, called the Lake
District, is sparsely populated and lacks
agricultural and industrial resources. To the south
and west of the lake district, a vast region of
plains extends to the Sudetes on the Czech and
Slovak borders to the southwest and to the
Carpathians on the Czech, Slovak, and Ukrainian
borders to the southeast.
The country extends 649 kilometers from north to
south and 689 kilometers from east to west. Poland's
total area is 312,683 square kilometers, including
inland waters--a slightly smaller area than that of
New Mexico. The neighboring countries are Germany to
the west, the Czech Republic and Slovakia to the
south, Ukraine and Belarus to the east, and
Lithuania and the Russian province of Kaliningrad to
the northeast.
Geographic coordinates: 52°00′N 20°00′E
Topography
HypsometryThe average elevation of Poland is 173
meters, and only 3 % of Polish territory, along the
southern border, is higher than 500 meters. The
highest elevation is Mount Rysy, which rises 2,499
meters in the Tatra Range of the Carpathians, 95
kilometers south of Kraków. About 60 square
kilometers along the Gulf of Gdansk are below sea
level. Poland is traditionally divided into five
topographic zones from north to south. The largest,
the central lowlands, is narrow in the west, then
expands to the north and south as it extends
eastward. Along the eastern border, this zone
reaches from the far northeast to within 200
kilometers of the southern border. The terrain in
the central lowlands is quite flat, and earlier
glacial lakes have been filled by sediment. The
region is cut by several major rivers, including the
Oder (Odra), which defines the Silesian Lowlands in
the southwest, and the Vistula (Wisla), which
defines the lowland areas of east-central Poland.
To the south of the lowlands are the lesser Poland
uplands, a belt varying in width from 90 to 200
kilometers, formed by the gently sloping foothills
of the Sudeten and Carpathian mountain ranges and
the uplands that connect the ranges in southcentral
Poland. The topography of this region is divided
transversely into higher and lower elevations,
reflecting its underlying geological structure. In
the western section, the Silesia-Kraków Upthrust
contains rich coal deposits.
The third topographic area is located on either side
of Poland's southern border and is formed by the
Sudeten and Carpathian ranges. Within Poland,
neither of these ranges is forbidding enough to
prevent substantial habitation; the Carpathians are
especially densely populated. The rugged form of the
Sudeten range derives from the geological shifts
that formed the later Carpathian uplift. The highest
elevation in the Sudeten is 1,602 meters, in the
Karkonosze Mountains. The Carpathians in Poland,
formed as a discrete topographical unit in the
relatively recent Tertiary Era, are the highest and
most picturesque mountains in the country. They are
the northernmost edge of a much larger range that
extends into Czechsolvakia, Ukraine, Hungary, and
Romania. Within Poland the range includes two major
basins, the Oswiecim (Auschwitz) and Sandomierz,
which are rich in several minerals and natural gas.
To the north of the central lowlands, the lake
region includes the only primeval forests remaining
in Europe and much of Poland's shrinking unspoiled
natural habitat. Glacial action in this region
formed lakes and low hills in the otherwise flat
terrain adjacent to Lithuania and the Baltic Sea.
Small lakes dot the entire northern half of Poland,
and the glacial formations that characterize the
lake region extend as much as 200 kilometers inland
in western Poland. Wide river valleys divide the
lake region into three parts. In the northwest,
Pomerania is located south of the Baltic coastal
region and north of the Warta and Notec rivers.
Masuria occupies the remainder of northern Poland
and features a string of larger lakes. Most of
Poland's 9,300 lakes that are more than 10,000
square metres in area are located in the northern
part of the lake region, where they occupy about 10
% of the surface area.
The Baltic coastal plains are a low-lying region
formed of sediments deposited by the sea. The
coastline was shaped by the action of the rising sea
after the Scandinavian ice sheet retreated. The two
major inlets in the smooth coast are the Pomeranian
Bay on the German border in the far northwest and
the Gulf of Gdansk in the east. The Oder River
empties into the former, and the Vistula forms a
large delta at the head of the latter. Sandbars with
large dunes form lagoons and coastal lakes along
much of the coast.
Drainage
Nearly all of Poland is drained northward into
the Baltic Sea by the Vistula, the Oder, and the
tributaries of these two major rivers. About half
the country is drained by the Vistula, which
originates in the Tatra Mountains in far
south-central Poland. The Vistula Basin includes
most of the eastern half of the country and is
drained by a system of rivers that mainly join the
Vistula from the east. One of the tributaries, the
Bug, defines 280 kilometers of Poland's eastern
border with Ukraine and Belarus. The Oder and its
major tributary, the Warta, form a basin that drains
the western third of Poland into the bays north of
Szczecin. The drainage effect on a large part of
Polish terrain is weak, however, especially in the
lake region and the inland areas to its south. The
predominance of swampland, level terrain, and small,
shallow lakes hinders large-scale movement of water.
The rivers have two high-water periods per year. The
first is caused by melting snow and ice dams in
spring adding to the volume of lowland rivers; the
second is caused by heavy rains in July.
Climate
Satellite image of Poland in February
2003Poland's long-term and short-term weather
patterns are made transitional and variable by the
collision of diverse air masses above the country's
surface. Maritime air moves across Western Europe,
Arctic air sweeps down from the North Atlantic Ocean,
and subtropical air arrives from the South Atlantic
Ocean. Although the Arctic air dominates for much of
the year, its conjunction with warmer currents
generally moderates temperatures and generates
considerable precipitation, clouds, and fog. When
the moderating influences are lacking, winter
temperatures in mountain valleys may drop to -40 °C.
The spring arrives slowly in April, bringing mainly
sunny days after a period of alternating wintry and
springtime conditions. Summer, which extends from
June to August, is generally less humid than winter.
Showers and thunderstorms alternate with dry sunny
weather that is generated when southern winds
prevail. Early autumn is generally sunny and warm
before a period of rainy, colder weather in November
begins the transition into winter. Winter, which may
last from one to three months, brings frequent
snowstorms but relatively low total precipitation.
The range of mean temperatures is 6 °C in the
northeast to 8 °C in the southwest, but individual
readings in Poland's regions vary widely by season.
On the highest mountain peaks, the mean temperature
is below 0 °C. The Baltic coast, influenced by
moderating west winds, has cooler summers and warmer
winters. The other temperature extreme is in the
southeast along the border with Ukraine, where the
greatest seasonal differences occur and winter
temperatures average 4.5 °C below those in western
Poland. The growing season is about 40 days longer
in the southwest than in the northeast, where spring
arrives latest.
The average annual precipitation for the whole
country is 600 mm, but isolated mountain locations
receive as much as 1,300 mm per year. The total is
slightly higher in the southern uplands than in the
central plains. A few areas, notably along the
Vistula between Warsaw and the Baltic Sea and in the
far northwest, average less than 500 mm. In winter
about half the precipitation in the lowlands and the
entire amount in the mountains falls as snow. On the
average, precipitation in summer is twice that in
winter, providing a dependable supply of water for
crops.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_of_Poland