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The towns in County of Zadar are: Zadar, Benkovac , Biograd , Nin , Obrovac and Pag.
It includes the islands of Dugi otok , Ugljan , Pašman and most of Pag, as well as a number of other, smaller islands. It also features the Paklenica national park.
The County’s area is 7,854 km˛, 3,642 km˛ is land, which accounts for 6,4 per cent of the territory of Croatia. The sea area of the County is 3,632 km˛ and the insular area is 580 km˛.
The County’s population is 158,936 (accounting for 4,5 per cent of the total Croatia’s population), of which 109,000 people live in the coastal area, 21,000 on islands and 85,000 in the County’s inland.
The County of Zadar plays a distinctive role in the road and railway traffic linking of Croatia’s northern and southern parts.
The so-called Adriatic Tourist Road, the Zagreb- Split highway route and the Zagreb- Knin-Split railway route with branch-lines to Zadar and Šibenik pass through the County.
The maritime traffic is carried by the coastal route of the Adriatic Sea, by the Zadar- Ancona international car ferry route which is the shortest link between Central Europe and Italy, via Zagreb and Zadar to Rome and southward. Another route by which intensive traffic is carried is Zadar-Maslenica Bridge - St. Rok Tunnel - Zagreb route.
The Zadar Airport has recently been reconstructed and modernised. With runway improvements still to be undertaken it will eventually have the capacity of handling jumbo-jets.
There is also a very frequent maritime passenger port in the town of Zadar and the cargo maritime port in the Gazenica area whose current manipulative capacity amounts to one million tonnes per year. A construction of a wharf would raise this significantly. The port’s manipulative and warehouse capacities are used only in part.
The Ravni kotari area constitutes the greater part of the County’s inland, containing most of the cultivated farmland and towns having industry, crafts, trade and traffic development potential.
TourismTourism can be defined as the act of travel for the purpose of recreation, and the provision of services for this act. A tourist is someone who travels at least fifty miles from home, as defined by the World Tourism Organization (a United Nations body). is one of the County’s most important industries, owing to its geographical position, mild climate, indented coast, clear sea, numerous bays, inlets and beaches on 1,300 km of the sea coast and islands. Tourist amenities of the Zadar County are also the areas of outstanding natural beauty: the VelebitVelebit is the largest though not the highest mountain in Croatia. Its highest peak is the Vaganski Vrh at 1757 m. It is part of the Dinaric Alps and is located along the Adriatic coast, separating it from Lika in the interior. Velebit begins in the north, Telascica and Paklenica and adjacent Krka and Kornati national parks in the south and the Plitvice national park in the north.--adapted from Croatian Chamber of Economy--