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Nature Reserve Bomarzo
Tuscania Nature Reserve
The Nature Reserve
The Tuscania Nature Reserve, set up in 1997 by Regional
Law 29, covers 1,901 hectares, entirely within the municipality
of Tuscania. The Reserve Managing Agency is the Province of Viterbo
which manages the area in collaboration with the Municipality of
Tuscania. Its statutory mission is to protect the Park's territory,
enhance local natural and cultural resources, safeguard and rehabilitate
natural habitats, preserve animal and plant species, promote the
economic and social development of the local communities and enhance
natural resources for educational and recreational purposes.
The Park's land is mainly hilly, ranging from a maximum of 224 m
asl at San Savino (in the northern portion of the Reserve) to the
170-190 m of the town of Tuscania and reaching a minimum elevation
of 30-40 m along the Marta river and in the southernmost reaches
of its territory. The terrain is cloven by ravines and gullies of
great scenic impact, with lush vegetation, through which run the
Marta and its tributaries. All around are signs of past geological
eras, and some places offer us a variety of landscapes typical of
this part of Italy: the proud harshness of inland Maremma Laziale,
the gentle slopes of the coastal Maremma Litoranea and the sequence
of plains and canyons of inland Etruria near Viterbo.
The Marta river, the only river flowing out of Lake Bolsena, flows
for about half its length (70 km) in the territory of Tuscania,
cutting across most of the central portion of the Park, and in part
marking its borders. Some of the most idyllic countryside areas
in the Reserve lie along the banks of this river and its main tributaries:
Maschiolo and Traponzo.
The Park's territory consists mainly of farmland, more than 60%
(some 1,200 hectares) is cultivated with olive groves and cereal
crops. This use enhances the Parks' role as a primary economic and
environmental resource since it is perfectly in line with today's
concept of sustainable development where agriculture, apart from
its productive function, is also an element that safeguards the
land.
The attractive historic town of Tuscania, marked by the warm tones
of tufa stone, still surrounded by its curtain walls and guard towers,
is also located in the protected area.
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