Aldeadávila de la Ribera is located in the northwest of the Salamanca province. It borders Portugal and is 60 miles from the city of Salamanca. It is part of the region of La Ribera. It belongs to the Mancomunidad Centro Duero and to the judicial district of Vitigudino. The municipal district includes the towns of Aldeadávila de la Ribera, Corporario and Salto de Aldeadávila. Its territory is included in the Arribes del Duero natural park, a protected natural area of great tourist and scientific attraction.
Geomorphology Aldeadávila de la Ribera has a predominantly gentle, hilly relief, typical of the Zamoran-Salamancan peneplain of the Northern Plateau, which contrasts with the deep river beds of the River Duero and its tributaries. Its average altitude ranges between 2395 ft and 2198 ft, with the highest point being the Pico de la Cabeza (2545 ft) and the lowest point being the bank of the Duero River at the base of the
Aldeadávila Dam (623 ft). Geologically, Aldeadávila lies within the Iberian Massif, one of the largest geological units of the Iberian Peninsula. Two main rock types can be identified in the municipality: granitoids, among which the granitic massif in which the Aldeadávila dam is excavated stands out; and schists and slates of the Schist-Grauvaic Complex. There are also some scattered pegmatites with mineralisations of some interest that were exploited in the past. The most important landscape feature of Aldeadávila de la Ribera is the fluvial canyon of the river Duero, a deep incision of more than 60 miles in length which constitutes one of the largest fluvial canyons in the Iberian Peninsula. This canyon is also one of the geosites recognised by the Global Geosites project in Spain.
Populated places The municipality of Aldeadávila is made up of the town of Aldeadávila de la Ribera, where the town hall is located, and the adjoining towns of Corporario de la Ribera and the village of Salto de Aldeadávila, formerly known as Santa Marina or La Verde. Corporario is a locality of just over 150 inhabitants located immediately next to Aldeadávila, so close to it that they practically form the same urban nucleus. Antonio Llorente says in his book "it can almost be considered as a neighbourhood of Aldeadávila". It was an independent municipality until 1972, when it was annexed to Aldeadávila, mainly due to the lack of economic means to provide the obligatory minimum services. It now has no town council, but continues to hold its own patron saint festivals, for example. Its church, one of the oldest in the province, is of singular beauty and is recommended as a tourist attraction. Salto de Aldeadávila is a small village in the Duero valley, dominated by the Altos de Lagoaça. It has existed since the 12th century due to the hermits who settled in the Convent of La Verde, which after its abandonment was remodelled and reused as an inn in the 1950s. It currently has a population of around 20 people. It has always depended administratively on Aldeadávila. == Monuments and sights ==