Honduras Topography
Figure 3. Topography and Drainage
Honduras has three distinct topographical regions: an
extensive interior highland area and two narrow coastal lowlands.
The interior, which constitutes approximately 80 percent of
the country's terrain, is mountainous. The larger Caribbean
lowlands in the north and the Pacific lowlands bordering the Golfo de
Fonseca
are characterized by alluvial plains.
Interior Highlands
Rugged mountainous terrain in central Honduras
Courtesy Bryan Fung
Lago de Yojoa, largest lake in Honduras
Courtesy Richard Haggerty
The interior highlands are the most prominent feature
of
Honduran topography. Composing approximately 80 percent of
the
country's total area, these mountain areas are home to the
majority
of the population. Because the rugged terrain has made the
land
difficult to traverse and equally difficult to cultivate,
this area
has not been highly developed. The soil here is poor;
Honduras
lacks the rich volcanic ash found in other Central
American
countries. Until the early part of the twentieth century,
the
highlands economy consisted primarily of mining and
livestock.
In the west, Honduras's mountains blend into the
mountain ranges
of Guatemala. The western mountains have the highest
peaks, with
the Pico Congolón at an elevation of 2,500 meters and the
Cerro de
Las Minas at 2,850 meters. These mountains are woodland
covered
with mainly pine forests.
In the east, the mountains merge with those in
Nicaragua.
Although generally not as high as the mountains near the
Guatemalan
border, the eastern ranges possess some high peaks, such
as the
Montaña de la Flor at 2,300 meters, El Boquerón (Monte El
Boquerón)
at 2,485 meters, and Pico Bonito at 2,435 meters.
One of the most prominent features of the interior
highlands is
a depression that runs from the Caribbean Sea to the Golfo
de
Fonseca. This depression splits the country's cordilleras
into
eastern and western parts and provides a relatively easy
transportation route across the isthmus. Widest at its
northern end
near San Pedro Sula, the depression narrows as it follows
the upper
course of the Río Humuya. Passing first through Comayagua
and then
through narrow passes south of the city, the depression
widens
again as it runs along the border of El Salvador into the
Golfo de
Fonseca.
Scattered throughout the interior highlands are
numerous flatfloored valleys, 300 to 900 meters in elevation, which
vary in
size. The floors of the large valleys provide sufficient
grass,
shrubs, and dry woodland to support livestock and, in some
cases,
commercial agriculture. Subsistence agriculture has been
relegated
to the slopes of the valleys, with the limitations of
small-sized
holdings, primitive technology, and low productivity that
traditionally accompany hillside cultivation. Villages and
towns,
including the capital, Tegucigalpa, are tucked in the
larger
valleys.
Vegetation in the interior highlands is varied. Much of
the
western, southern, and central mountains are open
woodland--
supporting pine forest interspersed with some oak, scrub,
and
grassy clearings. The ranges toward the east are primarily
continuous areas of dense, broad-leaf evergreen forest.
Around the
highest peaks, remnants of dense rain forest that formerly
covered
much of the area are still found.
Data as of December 1993
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