Serra do Mar, great escarpment on the eastern margins of the Brazilian Highlands, which descend abruptly to the Atlantic coast. It extends for about 1,600 miles (2,600 km) from Rio Grande do Sul estado (state) all the way northward to Bahia state but is known as the Serra do Mar only in the southern section. The escarpment comprises such ranges as the Mantiqueira and Órgãos to the north of Rio de Janeiro, the Espinhaço and Aimorés mountains of Minas Gerais state and the Diamantina Upland of Bahia state. Sections of these highlands also are known separately or collectively as the Geral Mountains. The range averages between 2,600 and 3,000 feet (800 and 900 metres), but in Rio de Janeiro state it is surmounted by the Órgãos Mountains (7,365 feet [2,245 metres]), which overlook Guanabara Bay. Until the railroads passed over it in the 19th century, the Serra do Mar historically formed a major barrier to the development of Brazil’s vast interior. The escarpment was originally covered by dense tropical and subtropical forests, of which only traces remain.