Major landforms of America Central and the Caribbean

Cordillera Central:
The Cordillera Central is the highest mountain range in the Dominican Republic and in all of the West Indies. Connected to the Massif du Nord in Haiti, it gradually bends southwards and finishes near the town of San Cristóbal on the Caribbean coastal plains. Because of its altitude, cool temperature, and scenic vistas, the Cordillera Central is also known as the "Dominican Alps".

Cordillera de Talamanca:
 The Cordillera de Talamanca is a mountain range that lies on the border between Costa Rica and Panama. This range contains in the south of Costa Rica stretches from southwest of San José to beyond the border with Panama and contains the highest peaks of Costa Rica and Panama, among them the Cerro Chirripó and the more accessible high peak of Cerro de la Muerte.


Cordillera Isabelia:
Cordillera Isabelia or Cordillera Isabella is the northern portion of the central mountain range in Nicaragua, which runs from north-west to south-east through the center of the country. Isabelia reaches an elevation of more than its highest point is Pico Mogoton, on the border with Honduras.


Maya Mountains:
The Maya Mountains are a mountain range in Belize and eastern Guatemala. The Maya Mountains and associated foothills contain a number of important Mayan ruins.


Sierra de Bahoruco:
This mountain range represents the eastern end of the submerged range that, starting in Central America, goes through Jamaica, the Winds Channel and emerges in Haiti, forming the Massif de la Hotte and Massif de La Selle; this last one, when it crosses to the Dominican Republic, is known as Sierra de Bahoruco. Bahoruco is an arawak name that was used, mainly, to describe the eastern part of the range (the Eastern Bahoruco).
Serranía de Tabasara:
The Cordillera Central, also known as highland Tabasará and Cordillera of Chiriquí is a mountain range located west of Panama and is the extension of the Cordillera de Talamanca in Panama. Es un arco montañoso que constituye el dorsal del relieve geográfico panameño, siendo la divisoria entre las vertientes del Pacífico y el mar Caribe . Is an arc of mountains which forms the spine of Panama geographical relief, with the divide between the watersheds of the Pacific and Caribbean Sea . Se extiende desde la frontera con Costa Rica, pasando las provincias de Bocas del Toro , Chiriquí , Veraguas , la comarca Ngöbe-Buglé , Coclé y el extremo oeste de la provincia de Panamá , culminando en el cerro Trinidad . It extends from the border with Costa Rica, from the provinces of Bocas del Toro , Chiriquí , Veraguas , the Ngöbe-Bugle , Cocle and western edge of the province of Panama , culminating in the Cerro Trinidad .

Sierra Maestra:
Sierra Maestra is a mountain range that runs westward across the south of the old Oriente Province from what is now Guantánamo Province to Niquero in southeast Cuba, rising abruptly from the coast. The Sierra Maestra is the highest system of Cuba.