In historical records, the village was first mentioned in 1293. The local fauna, still partially unexplored, includes red deer, roe deer, boar, brown bear, lynx, wild cat, fox, and marten. Several dead trees that have already fallen down are even bigger. The biggest living fir tree is 46 m tall with a stem diameter of 148 cm. On average, fir threes achieve an age of 350–400 years and beech trees 210–230 years in Badínsky prales. Dominant tree species are fir ( Abies alba), beech ( Fagus sylvatica), maple ( Acer pseudoplatanus), ash ( Fraxinus excelsior), and elm ( Ulmus glabra). It has an area of 30.70 hectares and additional 23.75 hectares are protected as a buffer zone. The municipality covers an area of 10.211 km².īadín is best known for a primeval forest Badínsky prales, which is strictly protected by the state against any human activity since 1913. The village lies at an altitude of 374 metres, but the altitude of the municipality ranges from 311 to 1,222 metres because it is partly situated in the Kremnické vrchy mountains. It is situated 13 km from the town of Banská Bystrica. Badín ( Hungarian: Erdőbádony) is a village and municipality of the Banská Bystrica District in the Banská Bystrica Region of central Slovakia.
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