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The long-distance hiking trail 34 (French: Sentier de grande randonnée 34 or GR 34 for short) is a French coastal path that starts from Mont-Saint-Michel and ends in Saint-Nazaire (Loire-Atlantique).
They go by the following names: French: sentier de grande randonnée, West Flemish: Groteroutepad, Dutch: Langeafstandwandelpad, Spanish: sendero de gran recorrido, Portuguese: percurso pedestre de grande rota – generally meaning "long trail" or more literally "great route". The trails in France alone cover approximately 60,000 kilometres ...
Carthew-Alderson Trail, part of the Great Divide Trail, in Waterton Lakes National Park. While the Great Divide Trail is a recognized hiking trail, [5] only portions of it are officially acknowledged by Parks Canada, and the rest is often not signed and occasionally not even an actual trail—merely a wilderness route.
Small block of Esterellite taken on a beach between Saint-Raphaël and Le Dramont. Esterellite (or Estérellite) is a porphyritic variety of quartz-bearing microdiorite, containing phenocrysts of quartz, zoned andesine, and hornblende only found in the southern part of the Esterel massif, between Agay and Saint-Raphael, France. [1]
Sentier is a standard configuration station. It has two platforms separated by the metro tracks and the vault is elliptical. Since the 1950s, the walls have been covered with a metallic bodywork with white horizontal uprights and light golden advertising frames. This arrangement is completed by yellow Motte style seats. The bevelled white ...
Piton des Neiges was formed by the Réunion hotspot and emerged from the sea about two million years ago. [citation needed] The volcano has been inactive for 20,000 years.. Réunion itself is considered to be about three million years old; the other two islands in the archipelago, Mauritius and Rodrigues, are 7.8 million and 1.5 million years old, respective
Mende is situated in the high valley of the Lot, in a mountainous area, in the Pays du Gévaudan, the Rieucros stream joins to it on its right bank.The city is overlooked (on the left bank of the Lot) by Mont Mimat [] and its black pine forest [].
In France, outside of academic circles, the massif is commonly referred to as the Mercantour massif. This name generally refers to the French part of the massif, which tends to be confused with the territory of the eponymous national park, although the latter is smaller in size.