Overview Licola is located on the coast of the
Mediterranean Sea. It is bordered to the north by Varcaturo and Lago Patria, hamlets within
Giugliano, to the east by
Monterusciello and
Monte Grillo, and to the south by the town of
Bacoli, while to the west lies the
Tyrrhenian Sea. The morphological and geological aspects of Licola are substantially the same as those of Cuma which it borders. The coast has an unusually straight contour in its north-south extension due to the erosion of the walls of
tuff spread all throughout zone. The dunes of Licola can be separated into two distinct zones: a first, outer layer subject to marine erosion, and a second strip that is stabilized by vegetation. Local vegetation consists of
halophilic plants on the coast, while the interior is characterized by
Mediterranean scrub. There is increasing interest in these natural habitats, as it is believed that some of the local flora are native only to this area. Further inland, the environment supports a system of dense vegetation, made up of
oak forest on a dry, sandy soil, which was repeatedly cited by Roman authors for the pleasant atmosphere it produces. There was once a lake (Lake Licola) in this interior region, before the land was reclaimed. The reclaimed land is now used for
agriculture, typically vineyards and orchards, due to the high fertility of the soil.
Climate Licola is subject to the typical Mediterranean
climate with hot summers, dry winters, and temperate rainy periods in autumn and spring. Over 75% of the days in an average year are sunny, and its climatic classification refers to the town of Pozzuoli as class "C". The
Professional Institute of State for Agriculture and the Environment (IPAA) has established an advanced station for weather data collection that monitors the climate of Licola with extreme precision. The accompanying table shows the figures for 2006:
Territory The territory of Licola preserves not only an invaluable archaeological heritage but also popular and religious traditions and a significant commercial, cultural and tourist function. According to the latest archaeological findings, which emerged during excavations carried out by the Archeological Heritage Authority, it is thought that the territory of Licola covers an old Roman road, the
Domitian Way, and the remains of an amphitheater of the same period whose precise location has yet to be discovered. The important archeological site of the town of
Liternum (containing the tomb of
Scipio Africanus) is located about one kilometer north of Licola, in Lago Patria (where a lake of the same name is located which has the unusual characteristic of being heart-shaped). It was there that Scipio chose to remain in voluntary exile from Rome and where he founded a Roman colony along with his most trusted legionaries and their families. To the south,
Cumae preserves an invaluable acropolis as well as the Cave of the Sibyl, famous for the prophesies uttered there by the
Cumaean Sibyl, while slightly further south lies the magnificent Arco Felice Vecchio. Licola now contains the Regional Park of the
Phlegraean Fields (Campi Flegrei), which preserves the dunes and habitat specific to the area and has been declared a Site of Importance to the Community and a Special Protection Zone owing to the rarity of the species living there, such as the
sea daffodil. North Licola is in the Natural Reserve of "Foce Volturno - Costa di Licola". Along with the remains of the Cumaean Acropolis, the Regional Park of the Phlegraen Fields also contains an area of rare Mediterranean evergreen forest, known to the ancients as the
Silva Gallinaria. Numerous species of both migrating and non-migrating birds—many endangered—take refuge in the marshes and green areas of Licola. Most notably, the
heron has returned to the area, while on the beaches there have been sightings of
loggerhead sea turtles. The seabed along the Licola-Cumae beach, between the island of Ischia and Ventotene, contains a
submarine canyon, the Canyon of Cumae, which provides a home for
cetaceans such as
dolphins and
rorquals. ==Economy==