Děvín in Moravia (Pavlov Hills)


Děvín Mayden Berg; ; is the highest mountain of Pavlov Hills, northern part of, Moravia Czech Republic. Located nearby of the historical border between Austria and Moravia, and right on trace where runs line of drainage divide of Upper Dyje drainage and Dyje/Morava mesodrainage.
The average annual temperature is about 8,2 °C.
A radio and TV transmitter is situated on the top. The lower platform is used as a watcharea. The mountain is also a popular area and hikers goal.

History

The area is rich in historical interest. The summit of Děvín has the remains of a huge Iron Age hill fort, while the ancient Amber Route runs neighbors of the mountains base, and all archaic roads in landscape, originally created by anymals and later owertaken by humans. The area around base of the mountain is permanently settled longer than last 30 000 years. Since Cromagnos hunters, ower Celtic tribes settlement, Roman fortress, Great Moravia hillforts. The Venus of Dolní Věstonice is a Venus figurine, a ceramic statuette of a nude female figure dated to 29,000–25,000 BCE, which was found at a Paleolithic site in the Moravian basin south of Brno. In the base of Děvín Mountain 549 metres. This figurine, together with a few others from nearby locations, is the oldest known ceramic article in the world.

Geology

The entire Děvín massif consists mainly by Jourassic limestone, i.e. series of rocks generated during sedimentation.
The body of the Děvín Mountain is strongly modulated, with outcrops and cliffs of pure, hard and white limestone of Later Jurassic origin, called Ernstbrunn limestone.
Sedimentation of Ernstbrunn limestone was preceded by the sedimentation of grey calcareous
Děvín-Kotel massif.
Děvín claystone and clay limestone, called Klentnice layers. All the Pavlov Hills are situated at the margin of the flysch zone of the Northern Limestone Alps and Western Carpathians. The flysch beds consist of strongly folded Lower Tertiary claystone, sandstone and conglomerate. During the periods of orogenetic activity in the Tertiary, large blocks of Jurassic and Early Cretaceous rocks were torn from their Jurassic base, and re-deposited over the younger flysch beds.
In the Lower Badenian period, the Pavlov Hills were surrounded by a
warm sea. Pieces of Jurassic rock present in the littoral gravel from that period indicate that limestone may have been already denuded at that time. At 15 Ma BP a strong
subsidence formed the Vienna Basin. During the following 9 Ma, up to 3 km thick layers of
maritime and lacustrine sediments were deposited on its bottom.

Flora

Děvín as a whole eastern part of Pálava lies in the northwest promontory of the Panonian plain. It is the warmest and almost the most arid area in the Czech Republic, and therefore vines are cultivated here. Because of this climate some plant species that do not occur anywhere else in the country grow here. The colourful mosaic of arid rock grass, fringe tree communities, thermophilous bushes and thermophilous oakwoods on the Děvín slopes, which originated partly due to the influence of grazing, is called karst forest steppe. The Děvín forest plateaus are dominated by sparse loess oakwoods together with a species-rich herbaceous layer, while Panonian oak-hornbean dominates the north-facing slopes and valleys.Riparian forests with pedunculate oaks and narrow-leaved ashes and quite small areas of alluvial meadows have been preserved in the Dyje floodplain in the vicinity of Křivé lake. Remains of halophytic vegetation, which occurred quite commonly on the salinated grazing land in South Moravia, still survive on the western bank of Nesyt pond near Sedlec.
Summit is covered by steppe meadow, pinewood and rock.

Fauna

View

The observation tower and later TV transmitter was built between 1979-80. The Bílé Karpaty, Malá Fatra Mts. and Alps, and also Vienna, Brno and Bratislava can be seen from the observation, view terrace. By fair weather, the silhouette of Děvín and the whole hill complex may be observed from the departure hall of Brno International Airport.

Surrounding

2 km to north is located well known archeological site Dolní Věstonice-most famous ceramic figurine - Venus of Dolní Věstonice was discovered there by archeologist Karel Absolon.