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Peru topographic maps

Click on a map to view its topography, its elevation and its terrain.

San Juan de Cocheros

Peru > Huánuco > Chinchao

Average elevation: 1,161 m

Panao

Peru > Huánuco

Average elevation: 3,249 m

Ica

Peru

Ica has significant wine and pisco industries, annual fiestas, a museum and historic colonial churches. The climate is generally sunny and dry due to its elevation above coastal fog and mist. As of 2020, the Peruvian desert, around the Huacachina Oasis, has gotten significantly popular among tourists for…

Average elevation: 1,624 m

Santa Fe

Peru > Loreto > Emilio San Martín

Average elevation: 103 m

Piura

Peru

Topography is smooth in the coast and rough in the Sierra. There are many arid plains in the southern region. The Sechura Desert, located south of the Piura River, is Peru's largest desert and one of the world's few examples of a tropical desert; it borders a tropical terrain to the north. The Bayóvar…

Average elevation: 675 m

Province of San Marcos

Peru > Cajamarca

Average elevation: 2,783 m

Cochabamba

Peru > Ancash

Average elevation: 2,965 m

Puno

Peru

Average elevation: 3,150 m

Lima Metropolitan Area

Peru > Lima

Average elevation: 591 m

Arequipa

Peru

This department has a rough topography, which is characterised by heavy layers of volcanic lava covering large areas of its inter-Andean sector. It has deep canyons such as the ones formed by the Ocoña and Majes rivers. Plateaus range in height from medium, such as La Joya, and high-altitude ones such the…

Average elevation: 2,599 m

Montevideo

Peru > Apurímac > Uranmarca

Average elevation: 3,249 m

Moquegua

Peru

Average elevation: 2,772 m

Tingo Maria National Park

Peru > Huánuco > Mariano Dámaso Beraún

Topography in the park is steep and mountainous, because the Bella Durmiente massif occupies almost of its entire extension. Elevations in the park are in the range of 650–1808 m; rocky walls of 300–500 m in height are common. Soils are calcareous, rocky and thin, and landslides due to natural causes or…

Average elevation: 1,136 m

Province of Pisco

Peru > Ica > Humay

Average elevation: 587 m

La Rinconada

Peru > Puno > La Rinconada

High in the Andes, La Rinconada has an alpine tundra climate (ET, according to the Köppen climate classification), with no month having mean temperatures even close to the 10 °C (50 °F) threshold that would permit tree growth and a subtropical highland classification for the city. Far above the tree line,…

Average elevation: 4,646 m

Villa El Salvador

Peru > Apurímac > Villa El Salvador

Average elevation: 3,644 m

Fundo La Esperanza

Peru > Ica > Fundo La Esperanza

Average elevation: 245 m

Mendoza

Peru > Ica

Average elevation: 127 m

Santoa

Peru > Loreto > Sarayacu > Santoa

Average elevation: 117 m

Caylloma

Peru > Arequipa > Caylloma

Average elevation: 4,544 m

Cajamarca

Peru > Cajamarca

Cajamarca has a subtropical highland climate (Cwb, in the Köppen climate classification) which is characteristic of high elevations at tropical latitudes. This city presents a semi-dry, temperate, semi-cold climate with presence of rainfall mostly on spring and summer (from October to March) with little or no…

Average elevation: 1,456 m

Machupicchu

Peru > Cusco > Machupicchu

Average elevation: 3,640 m

Apurímac

Peru

Average elevation: 3,884 m

Chorrillos

Peru > Lima > Chorrillos

Average elevation: 34 m

Comas

Peru > Lima > Comas

Average elevation: 273 m

Independencia

Peru > Lima > Independencia

Average elevation: 224 m

Surquillo

Peru > Lima > Surquillo

Average elevation: 120 m

Huancayo

Peru > Junín > Huancayo

Average elevation: 3,830 m

Recuay

Peru > Ancash > Recuay

Average elevation: 4,001 m

Yungay

Peru > Ancash > Yungay

The Cordillera Blanca traverses the province. Waskaran, the highest elevation of Peru, lies on the border to the Carhuaz Province. Other mountains are listed below.

Average elevation: 3,365 m

Huánuco

Peru > Huánuco > Huánuco

Average elevation: 2,496 m

Tumbes

Peru > Tumbes

Average elevation: 258 m

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