Pohorje


Pohorje, also known as the Pohorje Massif or the Pohorje Mountains, is a mostly wooded, medium-high mountain range south of the Drava River in northeastern Slovenia. According to the traditional AVE classification it belongs to the Southern Limestone Alps. Geologically, it forms part of the Central Alps and features silicate metamorphic and igneous rock. Pohorje is sparsely populated with dispersed villages. There are also some ski resorts.

Geography

Pohorje is an Alpine mountain ridge with domed summits south of the Drava. It roughly lies in the triangle formed by the towns of Maribor, Dravograd and Slovenske Konjice. To the northwest, it is bounded by the Mislinja River, to the south by the Vitanje Lowlands, to the east it descends to the Drava Plain and to the southeast it descends to the Pohorje Foothills. It measures about from east to west and from north to south and covers an area of ca.. Its highest elevations are Black Peak , the only slightly lower Big Kopa Peak, and Lake Peak, which rises to. Forests cover over 70% of its surface.

Geology

Pohorje is a young mountain massif and is the southeasternmost part of the Central Alps. It is the only mountain chain in Slovenia made of silicate rock. Its peripheral parts consist of Paleozoic metamorphic rock, and its central parts of igneous rock, particularly granodiorite and dacite.
Near the village of Cezlak lies probably the only known deposit of cizlakite. The southern parts of Pohorje are known for white marble, which was quarried in Roman times.

Pohorje ski resorts

The following ski resorts stand at Pohorje:
Near hilltops within the mountain range are located a TV and radio transmitter Pohorje and a military air-traffic control radar station RP-2.