Mexico's Baja California Peninsula is a region defined throughout most of its 760-mile length by desert and coastal forms. It is located under subtropical skies, and its long, spindly form gives it nearly 1,900 miles of coastline. Far in the northern region of the peninsula lies an exception, a region that stands high above the surrounding desert and overlooks the crashing waves of the Pacific Ocean to its west and the Gulf of California to its east: the Sierra de San Pedro Martir.
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