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YucatAn[yOOkutan´] Pronunciation Key, peninsula, c.70,000 sq mi (181,300 sq km), mostly in SE Mexico, separating the Caribbean Sea from the Gulf of Mexico. It comprises the states of YucatAn, Campeche, and Quintana Roo, Mexico; Belize; and part of PetEn, Guatemala. MErida and Campeche, Mexico and Belize City, Belize are the chief cities of YucatAn. The inhabitants are predominantly the modern descendants of the Maya.
The peninsula is largely a low, flat, limestone tableland rising to c.500 ft (150 m) in the south. To the north and west the plain continues as the Campeche Bank, stretching under shallow water c.150 mi (240 km) from the low, sandy shoreline. The eastern coast rises in low cliffs in the north and is indented by bays and paralleled by islands and cays in the south; Cozumel is the largest island. Short ranges of hills cross the peninsula at scattered intervals. The only rivers are those flowing E and NW from PetEn.
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