![](../I/Corniche_jijelienne_01.jpg.webp)
Scenr from Corniche Jijelienne
![](../I/Macaque_berb%C3%A8re_%C3%A0_Ziama_Mansouriah_15_(Alg%C3%A9rie).jpg.webp)
Barbary macaques at Corniche Jijelienne.
Corniche Jjilienne (Arabic: كورنيش جيجل) is a natural region of northern Algeria characterised by rocky forested massifs rising above the coastal plain.[1] The forested areas provide some of the last extant habitat for the endangered Barbary macaque, Macaca sylvanus; this primate prehistorically had a much wider distribution in North Africa than at present.
See also
References
- Berardo Cori and Enrica Lemmi. 2002. Spatial Dynamics of Mediterranean Coastal Regions: An International HDP-oriented Research, Human Dimensions of Global Environmental Change Programme, Published by Patron, ISBN 978-88-555-2666-1. 444 pages
Line notes
- ↑ Berardo Cori and Enrica Lemmi. 2002
36°49′36.16″N 5°46′0.51″E / 36.8267111°N 5.7668083°E
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