Berici Hills
The Berici Hills are a group of hills in northeastern Italy, a special formation in the alluvial plain on which stands the city of Vicenza, originated on the bottom of an ancient sea over at least a hundred million years. Important for the top area is the Monte Berico.
Geography
The Berici Hills stand out, south of Vicenza, with the shape of a parallelogram, whose major axis is oriented towards the Northeast. It is about, and with a total area of about 165 km². The profile is evenly curved, compact and not particularly high on the level of the plain.The edges are jagged enough on each side, with alternating indentations and sinuosity or with simple engravings on the sides, the "scaranti". The sides are all pretty sweet and straight, except for the southeast side, which shows a nearly continuous sequence of nude and vertical cliffs.
Important place of recreation for many of the weekend vicentini is the lake that lies at the heart of high hills, the Fimon Lake.
Geology
The rocks, in most carbonatic, which consists of the backbone of the Colli Berici lead to attach to a marine hills. Moreover, the discovery of several bodies, animals and plants, as fossil.It is assumed that the sequence of rock layers is the result of a slow and steady process of deposition of sand, mud and fragments of shells on the bottom of a sea.