Federal District - Mexico City Attractions

 
Mexican State

Like the U.S. Federal District of Columbia, the Distrito Federal was established around the nation's capital as a means of preserving the independence of central government from individual states (its administration is the direct responsibility of the Mexican president). The Distrito occupies the south-east corner of the Valley of Mexico, with the Estado de México encircling it on three sides and the Estado de Morelos on its southern edge. It is bounded naturally by the Sierra de Guadalupe in the north, the foothills of the volcano belt - called the Sierra Nevada on account of the permanent snow-cover on 5000 m (16,410 ft)-high Popcatépetl and Iztaccíhuatl - in the east, the Las Cruces mountains in the west, and in the south, guarded by the rounded summits of Cerro Ajusco and Cerro Cuautzín, the Tres Marías Pass near the high Tres Marías.
A wall of skull carvings at the Templo Mayor in Mexico City.Templo Mayor, Mexico City
The Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City.Palace of Fine Arts, Mexico City
Lake in Chapultepec Park, Mexico City.Chapultepec Park, Mexico City
Flowers in front of the Metropolitan Cathedral in Mexico City.Metropolitan Cathedral, Mexico City
Front view of the Palace of Fine Arts in Mexico City.Palace of Fine Arts, Mexico City
The ornate entrance to the Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City.Palace of Fine Arts, Mexico City
Detail of a sculpture at the Templo Mayor in Mexico City.Templo Mayor, Mexico City
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