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PASMAN, an island
in the Zadar archipelago southeast of the island of Ugljan, separated
from it by a narrow strait called Zdrelac; area 56.9 sq km (length 21.1
km, width up to 4.1 km); population 3,349; highest peak Bokolj (272 m).
In the west the island is composed of Cretaceous limestone, in the east
of dolomites, with a small zone of fertile sandy deposits.

The limestone zone is
partly covered with underbrush, while the dolomite and sandy zones are
under vineyards and vegetable gardens. The steep western coast is
indented with numerous coves, well protected from the bora (especially
in the south-eastern part). Larger coves include Polaca, Taline, Triluke,
Landin, Soline and Kablin.
All places on the island
are situated along the less indented eastern coast: Tkon, Kraj, Pasman,
Mrljane, Nevidane, Dobropoljana, Banj and Zdrelac. Chief occupations are
farming, growing of vines, olives, fruit and vegetables, livestock
breeding, fishing and tourism. The regional road runs along the entire
island. Ferry lines with Biograd na Moru.
The island has been
populated since the prehistoric times (Illyrian hill-fort, Roman finds -
Pasman, Banj). Along the cove of Sveti Ante (St. Anthony) on the
south-western coast is a small, pre-Romanesque one-nave church. From
1050 the island was owned by the Biograd diocese and from 1126 by the
Zadar archdiocese. It was populated by the refugees who fled from the
Turks.
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Zdrelac

map of island

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