Pelion is one of the typical “ancient” mountains of Greece. Its location in central Greece, its beauty, as well as the wealth of its natural resources, and the combination with the sea (Aegean Sea and Pagassitikos Gulf) have made it famous since the very early Antiquity.
Pelion occupies the largest part of the Magnesia peninsula of which it is the natural backbone, and its volume practically keeps the Aegean Sea out of the Thessaly basin. Its natural limits are the cape of Aghios Georgios in the Aegean Sea, the cape Aianteio at the entrance of Pagassitikos Gulf, and cape Trachili, inside the Gulf, where the peninsula practically ends.