Philippines PHYSICAL SETTING
Figure 2. Topography and Drainage
The Philippine archipelago lies in Southeast Asia in a
position that has led to its becoming a cultural crossroads, a
place where Malays, Chinese, Spaniards, Americans, and others
have interacted to forge that unique cultural and racial blend
known to the world as Filipino. The archipelago numbers some
7,100 islands and the nation claims an exclusive economic zone
(EEZ--see Glossary)
of 200 nautical miles from its shores. The
Philippines occupies an area that stretches for 1,850 kilometers
from about the fifth to the twentieth parallels north latitude.
The total land area is almost 300,000 square kilometers. Only
approximately 1,000 of its islands are populated, and fewer than
one-half of these are larger than 2.5 square kilometers. Eleven
islands make up 94 percent of the Philippine landmass, and two of
these--Luzon and Mindanao--measure 105,000 and 95,000 square
kilometers, respectively. They, together with the cluster of the
Visayan Islands that separate them, represent the three principal
regions of the archipelago that are identified by the three stars
on the Philippine flag. Topographically, the Philippines is
broken up by the sea, which gives it one of the longest
coastlines of any nation in the world
(see
fig. 2). Most
Filipinos live on or near the coast, where they can easily
supplement their diet from approximately 2,000 species of fish.
Off the coast of eastern Mindanao is the Philippine Trough,
which descends to a depth of 10,430 meters. The Philippines is
part of a western Pacific arc system that is characterized by
active volcanoes. Among the most notable peaks are Mount Mayon
near Legaspi, Taal Volcano south of Manila, and Mount Apo on
Mindanao. All of the Philippines islands are prone to
earthquakes. The northern Luzon highlands, or Cordillera Central,
rise to between 2,500 and 2,750 meters, and, together with the
Sierra Madre in the northeastern portion of Luzon and the
mountains of Mindanao, boast rain forests that provide refuge for
numerous upland tribal groups. The rain forests also offer prime
habitat for more than 500 species of birds, including the
Philippine eagle (or monkey-eating eagle), some 800 species of
orchids, and some 8,500 species of flowering plants.
The country's most extensive river systems are the Pulangi
(Rio Grande), which flows into the Mindanao River; the Agusan, in
Mindanao which flows north into the Mindanao Sea; the Cagayan in
northern Luzon; and the Pampanga, which flows south from eastCentral Luzon into Manila Bay. Laguna de Bay, southeast of Manila
Bay, is the largest freshwater lake in the Philippines. Several
rivers have been harnessed for hydroelectric power.
Data as of June 1991
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