Chortis Highlands
The [San Juan River (Nicaragua)|]Chortis Highlands is a highland region in northern Central America, which covers portions of Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua.
Geography and geology
The Chortis Highlands is a large dissected plateau which extends across most of Honduras and El Salvador, along with a portion of western Guatemala and north-central Nicaragua. It is named for the Chʼortiʼ people, who inhabit the western portion of the Highlands.Geologically the Highlands is part of the Chortis Block, a continental fragment that extends eastwards under the Atlantic coastal plain and continental shelf of Honduras and Nicaragua, and westwards under the Pacific coastal lowlands and Central American Volcanic Arc of Guatemala, El Salvador, and Nicaragua. The Chortis Block forms the northwestern portion of the Caribbean Plate.
The Chortis Block is bounded on the north by the Motagua-Polochic Fault Zone in Guatemala. The valley of the Motagua River, which follows the fault, forms the northwestern boundary of the Highlands.
The Highlands is composed of several mountain ranges, or cordilleras, separated by intermontane valleys and plains. These ranges include:
- Sierra Nombre de Dios
- Sierra de Omoa
- Sierra de Espíritu Santo
- Sierra de Joconal
- Montaña de Santa Bárbara
- Montañas de Meámbar
- Sierra de Montecillos
- Sierra de Comayagua
- Sierra de Sulaco
- Cordillera de La Flor-La Muralla
- Sierra de Agalta
- Sierra de Botaderos
- Sierra Punta Piedra
- Montañas de Patuca
- Montecristo Massif or Sierra de Montecristo
- Sierra del Merendón
- Sierra de Celaque
- Sierra de Erandique
- Sierra de Puca-Opalaca
- Montaña de la Sierra
- Sierra de Lepaterique
- Sierra de Dipilto
- Montaña de Colón
- Cordillera Dariense
- Cordillera Chontaleña
Aguán, and Patuca rivers in Honduras, the Coco which forms the Honduras-Nicaragua border, and the Wawa, Kukalaya, Prinzapolka, Río Grande de Matagalpa, and
San Juan in Nicaragua.
The western portion of the highlands is drained by rivers that empty into the Pacific, including the Lempa in El Salvador, the Choluteca in Honduras, and the Negro in Nicaragua.