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Wikipedia

Americas

Coordinates: 19°N 96°W / 19°N 96°W / 19; -96

The Americas (sometimes collectively called America)[4][5][6] are a landmass comprising the totality of North and South America.[7][8][9] The Americas make up most of the land in Earth's Western Hemisphere and comprise the New World.[4]

The Americas
Area42,549,000 km2
(16,428,000 sq mi)
Population1.02 billion[1]
Population density22.67/km2 (58.74/sq mi)
DemonymAmerican,[2] New Worlder[3] (see usage)
Countries35
LanguagesSpanish, English, Portuguese, French, Haitian Creole, Quechua, Guaraní, Aymara, Nahuatl, Dutch and many others
Time zonesUTC−10:00 to UTC
Largest citiesLargest metropolitan areas
Largest cities
UN M49 code019 – Americas
001 – World
1990s CIA political map of the Americas in Lambert azimuthal equal-area projection

Along with their associated islands, the Americas cover 8% of Earth's total surface area and 28.4% of its land area. The topography is dominated by the American Cordillera, a long chain of mountains that runs the length of the west coast. The flatter eastern side of the Americas is dominated by large river basins, such as the Amazon, St. Lawrence RiverGreat Lakes basin, Mississippi, and La Plata. Since the Americas extend 14,000 km (8,700 mi) from north to south, the climate and ecology vary widely, from the arctic tundra of Northern Canada, Greenland, and Alaska, to the tropical rain forests in Central America and South America.

Humans first settled the Americas from Asia between 42,000 and 17,000 years ago. A second migration of Na-Dene speakers followed later from Asia. The subsequent migration of the Inuit into the neoarctic around 3500 BCE completed what is generally regarded as the settlement by the indigenous peoples of the Americas.

The first known European settlement in the Americas was by the Norse explorer Leif Erikson.[10] However, the colonization never became permanent and was later abandoned. The Spanish voyages of Christopher Columbus from 1492 to 1504 resulted in permanent contact with European (and subsequently, other Old World) powers, which eventually led to the Columbian exchange and inaugurated a period of exploration, conquest, and colonization whose effects and consequences persist to the present. The Spanish presence involved the enslavement of large numbers of the indigenous population of America.[11]

Diseases introduced from Europe and West Africa devastated the indigenous peoples, and the European powers colonized the Americas.[12] Mass emigration from Europe, including large numbers of indentured servants, and importation of African slaves largely replaced the indigenous peoples.

Decolonization of the Americas began with the American Revolution in the 1770s and largely ended with the Spanish–American War in the late 1890s. Currently, almost all of the population of the Americas resides in independent countries; however, the legacy of the colonization and settlement by Europeans is that the Americas share many common cultural traits, most notably Christianity and the use of West European languages: primarily Spanish, English, Portuguese, French, and, to a lesser extent, Dutch.

The Americas are home to nearly a billion inhabitants, two-thirds of whom reside in the United States, Brazil, and Mexico. It is home to eight megacities (metropolitan areas with ten million inhabitants or more): Greater Mexico City (21.2 million), São Paulo (21.2 million), New York City (19.7 million), Los Angeles (18.8 million), Buenos Aires (15.6 million),[13] Rio de Janeiro (13.0 million), Bogotá (10.4 million), and Lima (10.1 million).

Etymology and naming

 
America is named after Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci.[14]

The name "America" was first recorded in 1507. A two-dimensional globe created by Martin Waldseemüller was the earliest recorded use of the term.[15] The name was also used (together with the related term Amerigen) in the Cosmographiae Introductio, apparently written by Matthias Ringmann, in reference to South America.[16] It was applied to both North and South America by Gerardus Mercator in 1538. "America" derives from Americus, the Latin version of Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci's first name. The feminine form America accorded with the feminine names of Asia, Africa, and Europa.[17]

In modern English, North and South America are generally considered separate continents, and taken together are called the Americas, or more rarely America.[18][19][4] When conceived as a unitary continent, the form is generally the continent of America in the singular. However, without a clarifying context, singular America in English commonly refers to the United States of America.[4]

History

Pre-Columbian era

 
The Plaza Occidental in Copán, Honduras

The pre-Columbian era incorporates all period subdivisions in the history and prehistory of the Americas before the appearance of significant European influences on the American continents, spanning the time of the original settlement in the Upper Paleolithic to European colonization during the Early Modern period. The term Pre-Columbian is used especially often in the context of the great indigenous civilizations of the Americas, such as those of Mesoamerica (the Olmec, the Toltec, the Teotihuacano, the Zapotec, the Mixtec, the Aztec, and the Maya) and the Andes (Inca, Moche, Muisca, Cañaris).

Many pre-Columbian civilizations established characteristics and hallmarks which included permanent or urban settlements, agriculture, civic and monumental architecture, and complex societal hierarchies. Some of these civilizations had long faded by the time of the first permanent European arrivals (c. late 15th–early 16th centuries), and are known only through archeological investigations. Others were contemporary with this period, and are also known from historical accounts of the time. A few, such as the Maya, had their own written records. However, most Europeans of the time viewed such texts as pagan, and much was destroyed in Christian pyres. Only a few hidden documents remain today, leaving modern historians with glimpses of ancient culture and knowledge.[20]

Settlement

The first inhabitants migrated into the Americas from Asia. Habitation sites are known in Alaska and Yukon from at least 20,000 years ago, with suggested ages of up to 40,000 years.[22][23][24] Beyond that, the specifics of the Paleo-Indian migration to and throughout the Americas, including the dates and routes traveled, are subject to ongoing research and discussion.[25] Widespread habitation of the Americas occurred during the late glacial maximum, from 16,000 to 13,000 years ago.[24][26]

 
Statue representing the Americas at Palazzo Ferreria, in Valletta, Malta

The traditional theory has been that these early migrants moved into the Beringia land bridge between eastern Siberia and present-day Alaska around 40,000–17,000 years ago,[27] when sea levels were significantly lowered during the Quaternary glaciation.[25][28] These people are believed to have followed herds of now-extinct pleistocene megafauna along ice-free corridors that stretched between the Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets.[29] Another route proposed is that, either on foot or using primitive boats, they migrated down the Pacific coast to South America.[30] Evidence of the latter would since have been covered by a sea level rise of hundreds of meters following the last ice age.[31] Both routes may have been taken, although the genetic evidences suggests a single founding population.[32] The micro-satellite diversity and distributions specific to South American Indigenous people indicates that certain populations have been isolated since the initial colonization of the region.[33]

A second migration occurred after the initial peopling of the Americas;[34] Na Dene speakers found predominantly in North American groups at varying genetic rates with the highest frequency found among the Athabaskans at 42% derive from this second wave.[35] Linguists and biologists have reached a similar conclusion based on analysis of Amerindian language groups and ABO blood group system distributions.[34][36][37][38] Then the people of the Arctic small tool tradition, a broad cultural entity that developed along the Alaska Peninsula, around Bristol Bay, and on the eastern shores of the Bering Strait c. 2,500 BCE moved into North America.[39] The Arctic small tool tradition, a Paleo-Eskimo culture branched off into two cultural variants, including the Pre-Dorset, and the Independence traditions of Greenland.[40] The descendants of the Pre-Dorset cultural group, the Dorset culture was displaced by the final migrants from the Bering sea coast line, the Thule people (the ancestors of modern Inuit), by 1000 Common Era (CE).[40]

Norse colonization

Around the same time as the Inuit migrated into Greenland, Viking settlers began arriving in Greenland in 982 and Vinland shortly thereafter, establishing a settlement at L'Anse aux Meadows, near the northernmost tip of Newfoundland.[41] Contact between the Norse colonies and Europe was maintained, as James Watson Curran states:

From 985 to 1410, Greenland was in touch with the world. Then silence. In 1492 the Vatican noted that no news of that country "at the end of the world" had been received for 80 years, and the bishopric of the colony was offered to a certain ecclesiastic if he would go and "restore Christianity" there. He didn't go.[42]

Large-scale European colonization

 
Christopher Columbus leads expedition to the New World, 1492.

Although there had been previous trans-oceanic contact, large-scale European colonization of the Americas began with the first voyage of Christopher Columbus in 1492. The first Spanish settlement in the Americas was La Isabela in northern Hispaniola. This town was abandoned shortly after in favor of Santo Domingo de Guzmán, founded in 1496, the oldest American city of European foundation. This was the base from which the Spanish monarchy administered its new colonies and their expansion. Santo Domingo was subject to frequent raids by English and French pirates. During most of the 18th century, however, privateers from Santo Domingo were the scourge of the Antilles, with Dutch, British, French and Danish vessels as their prizes.[43]

On the continent, Panama City on the Pacific coast of Central America, founded on August 15, 1519, played an important role, being the base for the Spanish conquest of South America. Conquistador Lucas Vázquez de Ayllón established San Miguel de Guadalupe, the first European settlement in what is now the United States, on the Pee Dee River in South Carolina.[44] During the first half of the 16th century, Spanish colonists conducted raids throughout the Caribbean Basin, bringing captives from Central America, northern South America, and Florida back to Hispaniola and other Spanish settlements.[45]

France, led by Jacques Cartier and Giovanni da Verrazano,[46] focused primarily on North America. English explorations of the Americas were led by Giovanni Caboto[47] and Sir Walter Raleigh. The Dutch in New Netherland confined their operations to Manhattan Island, Long Island, the Hudson River Valley, and what later became New Jersey. The spread of new diseases brought by Europeans and African slaves killed many of the inhabitants of North America and South America,[48][49] with a general population crash of Native Americans occurring in the mid-16th century, often well ahead of European contact.[50] One of the most devastating diseases was smallpox.[51]

European immigrants were often part of state-sponsored attempts to found colonies in the Americas. Migration continued as people moved to the Americas fleeing religious persecution or seeking economic opportunities. Millions of individuals were forcibly transported to the Americas as slaves, prisoners or indentured servants.

 
Map showing the dates of independence from European powers. Black signifies areas that are dependent territories or parts of countries with a capital outside the Americas.

Decolonization of the Americas began with the American Revolution and the Haitian Revolution in the late 1700s. This was followed by numerous Latin American wars of independence in the early 1800s. Between 1811 and 1825, Paraguay, Argentina, Chile, Gran Colombia, the United Provinces of Central America, Mexico, Brazil, Peru, and Bolivia gained independence from Spain and Portugal in armed revolutions. After the Dominican Republic won independence from Haiti, it was re-annexed by Spain in 1861, but reclaimed its independence in 1865 at the conclusion of the Dominican Restoration War. The last violent episode of decolonization was the Cuban War of Independence which became the Spanish–American War, which resulted in the independence of Cuba in 1898, and the transfer of sovereignty over Puerto Rico from Spain to the United States.

Peaceful decolonization began with the United States's purchase of Louisiana from France in 1803, Florida from Spain in 1819, of Alaska from Russia in 1867, and the Danish West Indies from Denmark in 1916. Canada became independent of the United Kingdom, starting with the Balfour Declaration of 1926, Statute of Westminster 1931, and ending with the patriation of the Canadian Constitution in 1982. The Dominion of Newfoundland similarly achieved independence under the Balfour Declaration and Statute of Westminster, but relinquished self-rule in 1934.[52] It was subsequently confederated with Canada in 1949.

The remaining European colonies in the Caribbean began to achieve peaceful independence well after World War II. Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago became independent in 1962, and Guyana and Barbados both achieved independence in 1966. In the 1970s, the Bahamas, Grenada, Dominica, St. Lucia, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines all became independent of the United Kingdom, and Suriname became independent of the Netherlands. Belize, Antigua and Barbuda, and Saint Kitts and Nevis achieved independence from the United Kingdom in the 1980s.

Geography

 
Satellite photo of the Americas on Earth

Extent

The Americas make up most of the land in Earth's Western Hemisphere.[53] The northernmost point of the Americas is Kaffeklubben Island, which is the most northerly point of land on Earth.[54] The southernmost point is the islands of Southern Thule, although they are sometimes considered part of Antarctica.[55] The mainland of the Americas is the world's longest north-to-south landmass. The distance between its two polar extremities, Murchison Promontory on the Boothia Peninsula in northern Canada and Cape Froward in Chilean Patagonia, is roughly 14,000 km (8,700 mi).[56] The mainland's most westerly point is the end of the Seward Peninsula in Alaska; Attu Island, further off the Alaskan coast to the west, is considered the westernmost point of the Americas. Ponta do Seixas in northeastern Brazil forms the easternmost extremity of the mainland,[56] while Nordostrundingen, in Greenland, is the most easterly point of the continental shelf.

Geology

South America broke off from the west of the supercontinent Gondwana around 135 million years ago, forming its own continent.[57] Around 15 million years ago, the collision of the Caribbean Plate and the Pacific Plate resulted in the emergence of a series of volcanoes along the border that created a number of islands. The gaps in the archipelago of Central America filled in with material eroded off North America and South America, plus new land created by continued volcanism. By three million years ago, the continents of North America and South America were linked by the Isthmus of Panama, thereby forming the single landmass of the Americas.[58] The Great American Interchange resulted in many species being spread across the Americas, such as the cougar, porcupine, opossums, armadillos and hummingbirds.[59]

Topography

 
Aconcagua, in Argentina, is the highest peak in the Americas.

The geography of the western Americas is dominated by the American Cordillera, with the Andes running along the west coast of South America[60] and the Rocky Mountains and other North American Cordillera ranges running along the western side of North America.[61] The 2,300-kilometer-long (1,400 mi) Appalachian Mountains run along the east coast of North America from Alabama to Newfoundland.[62] North of the Appalachians, the Arctic Cordillera runs along the eastern coast of Canada.[63]

The largest mountain ranges are the Andes and Rocky Mountains. The Sierra Nevada and the Cascade Range reach similar altitudes as the Rocky Mountains, but are significantly smaller. In North America, the greatest number of fourteeners are in the United States, and more specifically in the U.S. state of Colorado. The highest peaks of the Americas are located in the Andes, with Aconcagua of Argentina being the highest; in North America Denali (Mount McKinley) in the U.S. state of Alaska is the tallest.

Between its coastal mountain ranges, North America has vast flat areas. The Interior Plains spread over much of the continent, with low relief.[64] The Canadian Shield covers almost 5 million km2 of North America and is generally quite flat.[65] Similarly, the north-east of South America is covered by the flat Amazon basin.[66] The Brazilian Highlands on the east coast are fairly smooth but show some variations in landform, while farther south the Gran Chaco and Pampas are broad lowlands.[67]

Climate

 
Climate zones of the Americas in the Köppen climate classification system

The climate of the Americas varies significantly from region to region. Tropical rainforest climate occurs in the latitudes of the Amazon, American cloud forests, southeastern Florida and Darién Gap. In the Rocky Mountains and Andes, dry and continental climates are observed. Often the higher altitudes of these mountains are snow-capped.

Southeastern North America is well known for its occurrence of tornadoes and hurricanes, of which the vast majority of tornadoes occur in the United States' Tornado Alley,[68] as well as in the southerly Dixie Alley in the North American late-winter and early spring seasons. Often parts of the Caribbean are exposed to the violent effects of hurricanes. These weather systems are formed by the collision of dry, cool air from Canada and wet, warm air from the Atlantic.

Hydrology

With coastal mountains and interior plains, the Americas have several large river basins that drain the continents. The largest river basin in North America is that of the Mississippi, covering the second largest watershed on the planet.[69] The Mississippi-Missouri river system drains most of 31 states of the U.S., most of the Great Plains, and large areas between the Rocky and Appalachian mountains. This river is the fourth longest in the world and tenth most powerful in the world.

In North America, to the east of the Appalachian Mountains, there are no major rivers but rather a series of rivers and streams that flow east with their terminus in the Atlantic Ocean, such as the Hudson River, Saint John River, and Savannah River. A similar instance arises with central Canadian rivers that drain into Hudson Bay; the largest being the Churchill River. On the west coast of North America, the main rivers are the Colorado River, Columbia River, Yukon River, Fraser River, and Sacramento River.

The Colorado River drains much of the Southern Rockies and parts of the Basin and Range Province. The river flows approximately 1,450 miles (2,330 km) into the Gulf of California,[70] during which over time it has carved out natural phenomena such as the Grand Canyon and created phenomena such as the Salton Sea. The Columbia is a large river, 1,243 miles (2,000 km) long, in central western North America and is the most powerful river on the West Coast of the Americas. In the far northwest of North America, the Yukon drains much of the Alaskan peninsula and flows 1,980 miles (3,190 km)[71] from parts of Yukon and the Northwest Territory to the Pacific. Draining to the Arctic Ocean of Canada, the Mackenzie River drains waters from the Arctic Great Lakes of Arctic Canada, as opposed to the Saint-Lawrence River that drains the Great Lakes of Southern Canada into the Atlantic Ocean. The Mackenzie River is the largest in Canada and drains 1,805,200 square kilometers (697,000 sq mi).[72]

The largest river basin in South America is that of the Amazon, which has the highest volume flow of any river on Earth.[73] The second largest watershed of South America is that of the Paraná River, which covers about 2.5 million km2.[74]

Ecology

North America and South America began to develop a shared population of flora and fauna around 2.5 million years ago, when continental drift brought the two continents into contact via the Isthmus of Panama. Initially, the exchange of biota was roughly equal, with North American genera migrating into South America in about the same proportions as South American genera migrated into North America. This exchange is known as the Great American Interchange. The exchange became lopsided after roughly a million years, with the total spread of South American genera into North America far more limited in scope than the spread on North American genera into South America.[75]

Countries and territories

There are 35 sovereign states in the Americas, as well as an autonomous country of Denmark, three overseas departments of France, three overseas collectivities of France,[76] and one uninhabited territory of France, eight overseas territories of the United Kingdom, three constituent countries of the Netherlands, three public bodies of the Netherlands, two unincorporated territories of the United States, and one uninhabited territory of the United States.[77]

Country or territory Total area
(km2)[78]
Population
[note 1]
Pop.
density
(per km2)
Common languages
(official in bold)
Capital
  Anguilla (United Kingdom) 91 13,452 164.8 English The Valley
  Antigua and Barbuda 442 86,295 199.1 Creole,[79] English St. John's
  Argentina 2,766,890 42,669,500 14.3 Spanish Buenos Aires
  Aruba (Netherlands) 180 101,484 594.4 Papiamentu, Spanish,[80] Dutch Oranjestad
  Bahamas, The 13,943 351,461 24.5 Creole,[81] English Nassau
  Barbados 430 285,000 595.3 Bajan,[82] English Bridgetown
  Belize 22,966 349,728 13.4 Spanish, Kriol, English[83] Belmopan
  Bermuda (United Kingdom) 54 64,237 1,203.7 English Hamilton
  Bolivia 1,098,580 10,027,254 8.4 Spanish and 36 indigenous languages La Paz and Sucre[84]
  Bonaire (Netherlands) 294 12,093 41.1 Papiamentu, Spanish, Dutch[85] Kralendijk
  Bouvet Island (Norway)[86] 49 0 0 Uninhabited  —
  Brazil 8,514,877 203,106,000 23.6 Portuguese Brasília
  British Virgin Islands (United Kingdom) 151 29,537 152.3 English Road Town
  Canada 9,984,670 37,411,592 3.8 English, French Ottawa
  Cayman Islands (United Kingdom) 264 55,456 212.1 English George Town
  Chile[87] 756,950 17,773,000 22 Spanish Santiago
  Clipperton Island (France) 6[88] 0[89] 0.0 Uninhabited  —
  Colombia 1,138,910 47,757,000 40 Spanish Bogotá
  Costa Rica 51,100 4,667,096 89.6 Spanish San José
  Cuba 109,886 11,167,325 102.0 Spanish Havana
  Curaçao (Netherlands) 444 150,563 317.1 Papiamentu, Dutch[85] Willemstad
  Dominica 751 71,293 89.2 French Patois, English[90] Roseau
  Dominican Republic 48,671 10,378,267 207.3 Spanish Santo Domingo
  Ecuador 283,560 15,819,400 53.8 Spanish, Quechua[91] Quito
  El Salvador 21,041 6,401,240 293.0 Spanish San Salvador
  Falkland Islands (United Kingdom)[92] 12,173 3,000 0.26 English Stanley
  French Guiana (France) 91,000 237,549 2.7 French Cayenne
  Greenland (Kingdom of Denmark) 2,166,086 56,483 0.026 Greenlandic, Danish Nuuk
  Grenada 344 103,328 302.3 English St. George's
  Guadeloupe (France) 1,628 405,739 246.7 French Basse-Terre
  Guatemala 108,889 15,806,675 128.8 Spanish, Garifuna and 23 Mayan languages Guatemala City
  Guyana 214,999 784,894 3.5 English Georgetown
  Haiti 27,750 10,745,665 361.5 Creole, French Port-au-Prince
  Honduras 112,492 8,555,072 66.4 Spanish Tegucigalpa
  Jamaica 10,991 2,717,991 247.4 Patois, English Kingston
  Martinique (France) 1,128 392,291 352.6 Patois,[93] French Fort-de-France
  Mexico 1,964,375 119,713,203 57.1 Spanish, 68 indigenous languages Mexico City
  Montserrat (United Kingdom) 102 4,922 58.8 Creole English, English[94] Plymouth; Brades[95]
Navassa Island (United States / Haiti) 5[88] 0[89] 0.0 Uninhabited  —
  Nicaragua 130,373 6,071,045 44.1 Spanish Managua
  Panama 75,417 3,405,813 45.8 Spanish Panama City
  Paraguay 406,750 6,783,374 15.6 Guaraní, Spanish Asunción
  Peru 1,285,220 30,814,175 22 Spanish, Quechua, and other indigenous languages Lima
  Puerto Rico (United States) 8,870 3,615,086 448.9 Spanish, English San Juan
  Saba (Netherlands) 13 1,537[96] 118.2 English, Dutch The Bottom
  Saint Barthélemy (France) 21[88] 8,938[89] 354.7 French Gustavia
  Saint Kitts and Nevis 261 55,000 199.2 English Basseterre
  Saint Lucia 539 180,000 319.1 English, French Creole Castries
  Saint Martin (France) 54[88] 36,979 552.2 French Marigot
  Saint Pierre and Miquelon (France) 242 6,081 24.8 French Saint-Pierre
  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 389 109,000 280.2 English Kingstown
  Sint Eustatius (Netherlands) 21 2,739[96] 130.4 Dutch, English Oranjestad
  Sint Maarten (Netherlands) 34 37,429 1,176.7 English, Spanish, Dutch Philipsburg
  South Georgia and
South Sandwich Islands
(UK)
[97]
3,093 20 0.01 English Grytviken
  Suriname 163,270 534,189 3 Dutch and others[98] Paramaribo
  Trinidad and Tobago 5,130 1,328,019 261.0 English Port of Spain
  Turks and Caicos Islands (UK) 948 31,458 34.8 Creole English, English[99] Cockburn Town
  United States of America[note 2] 9,629,091 320,206,000 34.2 English Washington, D.C.
  U.S. Virgin Islands (United States) 347 106,405 317.0 English Charlotte Amalie
  Uruguay 176,220 3,286,314 19.4 Spanish Montevideo
  Venezuela 916,445 30,206,307 30.2 Spanish and 40 indigenous languages Caracas
Total 42,320,985 973,186,925 21.9

Demography

Population

In 2021 the total population of the Americas was about 1.03 billion people, divided as follows:

  • North America: 596.6 million (includes Central America and the Caribbean)
  • South America: 434.3 million

Largest urban centers

There are three urban centers that each hold titles for being the largest population area based on the three main demographic concepts:[100]

A city proper is the locality with legally fixed boundaries and an administratively recognized urban status that is usually characterized by some form of local government.[101][102][103][104][105]
An urban area is characterized by higher population density and vast human features in comparison to areas surrounding it. Urban areas may be cities, towns or conurbations, but the term is not commonly extended to rural settlements such as villages and hamlets. Urban areas are created and further developed by the process of urbanization and do not include large swaths of rural land, as do metropolitan areas.[citation needed]
Unlike an urban area, a metropolitan area includes not only the urban area, but also satellite cities plus intervening rural land that is socio-economically connected to the urban core city, typically by employment ties through commuting, with the urban core city being the primary labor market.[citation needed]

In accordance with these definitions, the three largest population centers in the Americas are: Mexico City, anchor to the largest metropolitan area in the Americas; New York City, anchor to the largest urban area in the Americas; and São Paulo, the largest city proper in the Americas. All three cities maintain Alpha classification and large scale influence.

Country City City Population Metro Area Population
Mexico Mexico City 8,864,000 22,300,000[106]
Brazil São Paulo 12,038,175 21,742,939[107]
United States New York City 8,405,837[108] 19,949,502[109]
Argentina Buenos Aires 2,891,082[13] 15,594,428[13]
United States Los Angeles 3,928,864[110] 13,131,431[111]

Ethnology

The population of the Americas is made up of the descendants of four large ethnic groups and their combinations.

The majority of the population live in Latin America, named for its predominant cultures, rooted in Latin Europe (including the two dominant languages, Spanish and Portuguese, both Romance languages), more specifically in the Iberian nations of Portugal and Spain (hence the use of the term Ibero-America as a synonym). Latin America is typically contrasted with Anglo-America, where English, a Germanic language, is prevalent, and which comprises Canada (with the exception of Francophone Canada rooted in Latin Europe [France]—see Quebec and Acadia) and the United States. Both countries are located in North America, with cultures deriving predominantly from Anglo-Saxon and other Germanic roots.

Religion

The most prevalent faiths in the Americas are as follows:

  • Christianity (86 percent)[112]
    • Roman Catholicism: Practiced by 69 percent[113] of the Latin American population (61 percent[113] in Brazil whose Roman Catholic population of 134 million[114] is the greatest of any nation's), approximately 24 percent of the United States' population[115] and about 39 percent of Canada's.[116]
    • Protestantism: Practiced mostly in the United States, where half of the population are Protestant, Canada, with slightly more than a quarter of the population, and Greenland; there is a growing contingent of Evangelical and Pentecostal movements in predominantly Catholic Latin America.[117]
    • Eastern Orthodoxy: Found mostly in the United States (1 percent) and Canada; this Christian group is growing faster than many other Christian groups in Canada and now represents roughly 3 percent of the Canadian population.[116]
    • Non-denominational Christians and other Christians (some 1,000 different Christian denominations and sects practiced in the Americas).
  • Irreligion: About 12 percent, including atheists and agnostics, as well as those who profess some form of spirituality but do not identify themselves as members of any organized religion.
  • Islam: Together, Muslims constitute about 1 percent of the North American population and 0.3 percent of all Latin Americans. It is practiced by 3 percent [116] of Canadians and 0.6 percent of the U.S. population.[115] Argentina has the largest Muslim population in Latin America with up to 600,000 persons, or 1.5 percent of the population.[118]
  • Judaism (practiced by 2 percent of North Americans—approximately 2.5 percent of the U.S. population and 1.2 percent of Canadians[119]—and 0.23 percent of Latin Americans—Argentina has the largest Jewish population in Latin America with 200,000 members)[120]

Other faiths include Buddhism; Hinduism; Sikhism; Baháʼí Faith; a wide variety of indigenous religions, many of which can be categorized as animistic; new age religions and many African and African-derived religions. Syncretic faiths can also be found throughout the Americas.

Religious Demographics According to 2010 censuses/estimates in each country
Country Christians Catholics Protestants None/Atheists/Agnostics Others
Argentina[121] 86.2% 76.5% 9.7% 11.3% 2.5%
Bolivia 95.3% 73.7% 21.6% 3.7% 1.0%
Brazil[122] 86.8% 64.6% 22.2% 8.4% 4.8%
Canada[116] 62.6% 38.7% 23.9% 28.5% 8.9%
Chile[123] 76.0% 60.0% 16.0% 21.0% 3.0%
Colombia[124] 93.9% 80.3% 13.6% 5.2% 1.7%
Costa Rica[125] 84.3% 70.5% 13.8% 11.3% 4.3%
Dominican Republic[126] 87.1% 68.3% 18.8% 10.6% 2.2%
Ecuador[127] 95.6% 87.8% 7.7% 3.5% 1.0%
El Salvador[128] 75.5% 45.8% 29.7% 24.3% 1.2%
Guatemala[129] 79.3% 47.6% 31.7% 18.3% 2.4%
Honduras[130] 83.0% 47.9% 35.1% 14.3% 2.7%
Mexico[131] 92.2% 82.7% 8.7% 4.9% 2.9%
Nicaragua[132] 81.1% 54.3% 26.8% 16.8% 2.1%
Panama 90.0% 75.0% 15.0% 7.0% 3.0%
Paraguay 96.8% 90.4% 6.4% 1.4% 1.8%
Peru[133] 96.7% 81.3% 12.5% 1.9% 1.4%
United States[134] 79.9% 25.9% 54.0% 15.2% 5.0%
Uruguay[135] 58.2% 47.1% 11.1% 40.4% 1.5%
Venezuela[136] 89.0% 72.0% 17.0% 8.0% 3.0%

Languages

 
Languages spoken in the Americas

Various languages are spoken in the Americas. Some are of European origin, others are spoken by indigenous peoples or are the mixture of various languages like the different creoles.[125]

The most widely spoken first language in the Americas is Spanish, followed by English and Brazilian Portuguese.[137] The dominant language of Latin America is Spanish, though the most populous nation in Latin America, Brazil, speaks Portuguese. Small enclaves of French-, Dutch- and English-speaking regions also exist in Latin America, notably in French Guiana, Suriname, and Belize and Guyana respectively. Haitian Creole is dominant in the nation of Haiti, where French is also spoken. Native languages are more prominent in Latin America than in Anglo-America, with Nahuatl, Quechua, Aymara, and Guaraní as the most common. Various other native languages are spoken with less frequency across both Anglo-America and Latin America. Creole languages other than Haitian Creole are also spoken in parts of Latin America.

The dominant language of Anglo-America is English. French is also official in Canada, where it is the predominant language in Quebec and an official language in New Brunswick along with English. It is also an important language in Louisiana, and in parts of New Hampshire, Maine, and Vermont. Spanish has kept an ongoing presence in the Southwestern United States, which formed part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain, especially in California and New Mexico, where a distinct variety of Spanish spoken since the 17th century has survived. It has more recently become widely spoken in other parts of the United States because of heavy immigration from Latin America. High levels of immigration in general have brought great linguistic diversity to Anglo-America, with over 300 languages known to be spoken in the United States alone, but most languages are spoken only in small enclaves and by relatively small immigrant groups.

The nations of Guyana, Suriname, and Belize are generally considered[by whom?] not to fall into either Anglo-America or Latin America because of their language differences from Latin America, geographic differences from Anglo-America, and cultural and historical differences from both regions; English is the primary language of Guyana and Belize, and Dutch is the primary language of Suriname.

Most of the non-native languages have, to different degrees, evolved differently from the mother country, but are usually still mutually intelligible. Some have combined, however, which has even resulted in completely new languages, such as Papiamento, which is a combination of Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch (representing the respective colonizers), native Arawak, various African languages, and, more recently English. The lingua franca Portuñol, a mixture of Portuguese and Spanish, is spoken in the border regions of Brazil and neighboring Spanish-speaking countries.[138] More specifically, Riverense Portuñol is spoken by around 100,000 people in the border regions of Brazil and Uruguay. Because of immigration, there are many communities where other languages are spoken from all parts of the world, especially in the United States, Brazil, Argentina, Canada, Chile, Costa Rica, and Uruguay—very important destinations for immigrants.[139][140][141]

Terminology

Subdivisions of the Americas
Map Legend
 
  North America (NA)
  South America (SA)
  May be included in
       either NA or SA
 
  North America (NA)
  May be included in NA
  Central America
  Caribbean
  South America
 
  North America (NA)
  May be included in NA

       Northern America

  Middle America (MA)
  Caribbean (may be
        included in MA)
  South America (SA)
  May be included
        in MA or SA
 
  Anglo-America (A-A)
  May be included in A-A
  Latin America (LA)
  May be included in LA

English

Speakers of English generally refer to the landmasses of North America and South America as the Americas, the Western Hemisphere, or the New World.[5] The adjective American may be used to indicate something pertains to the Americas,[2] but this term is primarily used in English to indicate something pertaining to the United States.[2][142][143] Some non-ambiguous alternatives exist, such as the adjective Pan-American,[144] or New Worlder as a demonym for a resident of the closely related New World.[3] Use of America in the hemispherical sense is sometimes retained, or can occur when translated from other languages.[145] For example, the Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC) in Paris maintains a single continental association for "America", represented by one of the five Olympic rings.[146]

American essayist H.L. Mencken said, "The Latin-Americans use Norteamericano in formal writing, but, save in Panama, prefer nicknames in colloquial speech."[147] To avoid "American" one can use constructed terms in their languages derived from "United States" or even "North America".[143][148][149] In Canada, its southern neighbor is often referred to as "the United States", "the U.S.A.", or (informally) "the States", while U.S. citizens are generally referred to as "Americans".[143] Most Canadians resent being referred to as "Americans".[143]

Spanish

In Spanish, América is a single continent composed of the subcontinents of América del Sur and América del Norte, the land bridge of América Central, and the islands of the Antillas. Americano or americana in Spanish refers to a person from América in a similar way that in which europeo or europea refers to a person from Europa. The terms sudamericano/a, centroamericano/a, antillano/a and norteamericano/a can be used to more specifically refer to the location where a person may live.

Citizens of the United States of America are normally referred to by the term estadounidense (rough literal translation: "United Statesian") instead of americano or americana which is discouraged,[150][151] and the country's name itself is officially translated as Estados Unidos de América (United States of America), commonly abbreviated as Estados Unidos (EEUU).[151] Also, the term norteamericano (North American) may refer to a citizen of the United States. This term is primarily used to refer to citizens of the United States, and less commonly to those of other North American countries.[150]

Portuguese

In Portuguese, América[152] is a single continent composed of América do Sul (South America), América Central (Central America) and América do Norte (North America).[153] It can be ambiguous, as América can be used to refer to the United States of America, but is avoided in print and formal environments.[154][155]

French

In French the word américain may be used for things relating to the Americas; however, similar to English, it is most often used for things relating to the United States, with the term états-unien sometimes used for clarity. Panaméricain may be used as an adjective to refer to the Americas without ambiguity.[156] French speakers may use the noun Amérique to refer to the whole landmass as one continent, or two continents, Amérique du Nord and Amérique du Sud. In French, Amérique is seldom used to refer to the United States, leading to some ambiguity when it is. Similar to English usage, les Amériques or des Amériques is used to refer unambiguously to the Americas.

Dutch

In Dutch, the word Amerika mostly refers to the United States.[157][158] Although the United States is equally often referred to as de Verenigde Staten ("the United States") or de VS ("the US"), Amerika relatively rarely refers to the Americas, but it is the only commonly used Dutch word for the Americas. This often leads to ambiguity; and to stress that something concerns the Americas as a whole, Dutch uses a combination, namely Noord- en Zuid-Amerika (North and South America).

Latin America and Central America are generally referred to as Latijns Amerika and Midden-Amerika respectively.

The adjective Amerikaans is most often used for things or people relating to the United States. There are no alternative words to distinguish between things relating to the United States or to the Americas. Dutch uses the local alternative for things relating to elsewhere in the Americas, such as Argentijns for Argentine, etc.

Multinational organizations

The following is a list of multinational organizations in the Americas.

Economy

Rank Country GDP (nominal, peak year)
millions of USD[159]
Peak year
1   United States 25,035,164 2022
2   Brazil 2,614,027 2011
3   Canada 2,200,352 2022
4   Mexico 1,424,533 2022
5   Argentina 643,861 2017
6   Colombia 382,094 2013
7   Venezuela 372,750 2012
8   Chile 316,770 2021
9   Peru 239,333 2022
10   Puerto Rico 118,677 2022
Rank Country GDP (PPP, peak year)
millions of USD
Peak year
1   United States 25,035,164 2022
2   Brazil 3,782,763 2022
3   Mexico 2,919,875 2022
4   Canada 2,240,390 2022
5   Argentina 1,195,581 2022
6   Colombia 964,743 2022
7   Chile 575,516 2022
8   Venezuela 561,817 2013
9   Peru 521,841 2022
10   Dominican Republic 256,446 2022

In exports and imports, in 2020, the United States was the world's second largest exporter (US$1.64 trillion) and the largest importer (US$2.56 trillion). Mexico was the tenth largest exporter and importer. Canada was the twelfth largest exporter and importer. Brazil was the 24th largest exporter and the 28th largest importer. Chile was the 45th largest exporter and the 47th largest importer. Argentina was the 46th largest exporter and the 52nd largest importer. Colombia was the 54th largest exporter and the 51st largest importer; among others.[160][161][162]

The agriculture of the continent is very strong and varied. Countries such as United States, Brazil, Canada, Mexico and Argentina are among the largest agricultural producers on the planet. In 2019, the continent dominated the world production of soy (almost 90% of the world total, with Brazil, the United States, Argentina, Paraguay, Canada and Bolivia among the 10 largest on the planet), sugarcane (about 55% of the world total, with Brazil, Mexico, the United States, and Guatemala among the 10 largest on the planet), coffee (about 55% of the world total, with Brazil, Colombia, Honduras, Peru and Guatemala among the 10 largest on the planet) and maize (about 48% of the world total, with the United States, Brazil, Argentina and Mexico among the 10 largest on the planet). The continent also produces almost 40% of world's orange (with Brazil, the US and Mexico among the top 10 producers), about 37% of world's pineapple (with Costa Rica, Brazil, Mexico and Colombia among the 10 largest producers), about 35% of world's lemon (with Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, and the United States among the 10 largest producers) and about 30% of world's cotton (with the US, Brazil, Mexico and Argentina among the top 10 producers), among several other products.[163]

In livestock, America also has giant productions. In 2018, the continent produced around 45% of the world's beef (with the US, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico and Canada among the world's 10 largest producers); about 36% of the world's chicken meat (with the US, Brazil and Mexico among the world's 10 largest producers), and about 28% of the world's cow's milk (with the US and Brazil among the 10 largest producers in the world), among other products.[163]

In industrial terms, the World Bank lists the top producing countries each year, based on the total value of production. According to the 2019 list, the United States has the second most valuable industry in the world (US$2.3 trillion), Mexico has the 12th most valuable industry in the world (US$217.8 billion), Brazil has the 13th most valuable industry. valuable in the world (US$173.6 billion), Canada has the 15th most valuable industry in the world (US$151.7 billion), Venezuela the 30th largest (US$58.2 billion, but depends on the oil to obtain this amount), Argentina was the 31st largest (US$57.7 billion), Colombia the 46th largest (US$35.4 billion), Peru the 50th largest ($28.7 billion), and Chile the 51st largest (US$28.3 billion), among others.[164]

In the production of oil, the continent had 8 of the 30 largest world producers in 2020: United States (1st), Canada (4th), Brazil (8th), Mexico (14th), Colombia (20th), Venezuela (26th), Ecuador (27th) and Argentina (28th).[165]

In the production of natural gas, the continent had 8 of the 32 largest world producers in 2015: United States (1st), Canada (5th), Argentina (18th), Trinidad and Tobago (20th), Mexico (21st), Venezuela (28th), Bolivia (31st) and Brazil (32nd).[166][167]

In the production of coal, the continent had 5 of the 30 largest world producers in 2018: United States (3rd), Colombia (12th), Canada (13th), Mexico (24th) and Brazil (27th).[168]

In the production of vehicles, the continent had 5 of the 30 largest world producers in 2019: United States (2nd), Mexico (7th), Brazil (9th), Canada (12th) and Argentina (28th).[169]

In the production of steel, the continent had 5 of the 31 largest world producers in 2019: United States (4th), Brazil (9th), Mexico (15th), Canada (18th) and Argentina (31st).[170][171]

In mining, the continent has large productions of gold (mainly in the United States, Canada, Peru, Mexico, Brazil and Argentina);[172] silver (mainly in Mexico, Peru, Chile, Bolivia, Argentina and the USA);[173] copper (mainly in Chile, Peru, USA, Mexico and Brazil);[174] platinum (Canada and US);[175] iron ore (Brazil, Canada, USA, Peru and Chile);[176] zinc (Peru, USA, Mexico, Bolivia, Canada and Brazil);[177] molybdenum (Chile, Peru, Mexico, Canada, USA);[178] lithium (Chile, Argentina, Brazil and Canada);[179] lead (Peru, USA, Mexico and Bolivia);[180] bauxite (Brazil, Jamaica, Canada, and USA);[181] tin (Peru, Bolivia and Brazil);[182] manganese (Brazil and Mexico);[183] antimony (Bolivia, Mexico, Guatemala, Canada and Ecuador);[184] nickel (Canada, Brazil, Dominican Republic, Cuba and USA);[185] niobium (Brazil and Canada);[186] rhenium (Chile and USA);[187] and iodine (Chile),[188] among others.

Dominica, Panama and the Dominican Republic have the fastest-growing economy in the Americas according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF),[189] 16, five to seven countries in the southern part of the Americas had weakening economies in decline, compared to only three countries in the northern part of the Americas.[190][191] Haiti has the lowest GDP per capita in the Americas, although its economy was growing slightly as of 2016.[190][191]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Includes the states of Hawaii and Alaska, which are both separated from the US mainland, with Hawaii distant from the North American landmass in the Pacific Ocean and therefore more commonly associated with the other territories of Oceania, while Alaska is located between Canada and Asia (Russia).

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Further reading

External links

americas, redirects, here, academic, journal, journal, other, uses, america, disambiguation, coordinates, sometimes, collectively, called, america, landmass, comprising, totality, north, south, america, make, most, land, earth, western, hemisphere, comprise, w. The Americas redirects here For the academic journal see The Americas journal For other uses see America disambiguation Coordinates 19 N 96 W 19 N 96 W 19 96 The Americas sometimes collectively called America 4 5 6 are a landmass comprising the totality of North and South America 7 8 9 The Americas make up most of the land in Earth s Western Hemisphere and comprise the New World 4 The AmericasShow national bordersHide national bordersArea42 549 000 km2 16 428 000 sq mi Population1 02 billion 1 Population density22 67 km2 58 74 sq mi DemonymAmerican 2 New Worlder 3 see usage Countries35LanguagesSpanish English Portuguese French Haitian Creole Quechua Guarani Aymara Nahuatl Dutch and many othersTime zonesUTC 10 00 to UTCLargest citiesLargest metropolitan areasLargest cities List 1 Sao Paulo2 Lima3 Mexico City4 New York City5 Bogota6 Rio de Janeiro7 Santiago8 Los Angeles9 Caracas10 Buenos AiresUN M49 code019 Americas001 World1990s CIA political map of the Americas in Lambert azimuthal equal area projection Along with their associated islands the Americas cover 8 of Earth s total surface area and 28 4 of its land area The topography is dominated by the American Cordillera a long chain of mountains that runs the length of the west coast The flatter eastern side of the Americas is dominated by large river basins such as the Amazon St Lawrence River Great Lakes basin Mississippi and La Plata Since the Americas extend 14 000 km 8 700 mi from north to south the climate and ecology vary widely from the arctic tundra of Northern Canada Greenland and Alaska to the tropical rain forests in Central America and South America Humans first settled the Americas from Asia between 42 000 and 17 000 years ago A second migration of Na Dene speakers followed later from Asia The subsequent migration of the Inuit into the neoarctic around 3500 BCE completed what is generally regarded as the settlement by the indigenous peoples of the Americas The first known European settlement in the Americas was by the Norse explorer Leif Erikson 10 However the colonization never became permanent and was later abandoned The Spanish voyages of Christopher Columbus from 1492 to 1504 resulted in permanent contact with European and subsequently other Old World powers which eventually led to the Columbian exchange and inaugurated a period of exploration conquest and colonization whose effects and consequences persist to the present The Spanish presence involved the enslavement of large numbers of the indigenous population of America 11 Diseases introduced from Europe and West Africa devastated the indigenous peoples and the European powers colonized the Americas 12 Mass emigration from Europe including large numbers of indentured servants and importation of African slaves largely replaced the indigenous peoples Decolonization of the Americas began with the American Revolution in the 1770s and largely ended with the Spanish American War in the late 1890s Currently almost all of the population of the Americas resides in independent countries however the legacy of the colonization and settlement by Europeans is that the Americas share many common cultural traits most notably Christianity and the use of West European languages primarily Spanish English Portuguese French and to a lesser extent Dutch The Americas are home to nearly a billion inhabitants two thirds of whom reside in the United States Brazil and Mexico It is home to eight megacities metropolitan areas with ten million inhabitants or more Greater Mexico City 21 2 million Sao Paulo 21 2 million New York City 19 7 million Los Angeles 18 8 million Buenos Aires 15 6 million 13 Rio de Janeiro 13 0 million Bogota 10 4 million and Lima 10 1 million Contents 1 Etymology and naming 2 History 2 1 Pre Columbian era 2 1 1 Settlement 2 1 2 Norse colonization 2 2 Large scale European colonization 3 Geography 3 1 Extent 3 2 Geology 3 3 Topography 3 4 Climate 3 5 Hydrology 3 6 Ecology 4 Countries and territories 5 Demography 5 1 Population 5 2 Largest urban centers 5 3 Ethnology 5 4 Religion 5 5 Languages 6 Terminology 6 1 English 6 2 Spanish 6 3 Portuguese 6 4 French 6 5 Dutch 7 Multinational organizations 8 Economy 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEtymology and namingMain article Naming of the Americas America is named after Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci 14 The name America was first recorded in 1507 A two dimensional globe created by Martin Waldseemuller was the earliest recorded use of the term 15 The name was also used together with the related term Amerigen in the Cosmographiae Introductio apparently written by Matthias Ringmann in reference to South America 16 It was applied to both North and South America by Gerardus Mercator in 1538 America derives from Americus the Latin version of Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci s first name The feminine form America accorded with the feminine names of Asia Africa and Europa 17 In modern English North and South America are generally considered separate continents and taken together are called the Americas or more rarely America 18 19 4 When conceived as a unitary continent the form is generally the continent of America in the singular However without a clarifying context singular America in English commonly refers to the United States of America 4 HistoryMain article History of the Americas Pre Columbian era Main article Pre Columbian era The Plaza Occidental in Copan Honduras The pre Columbian era incorporates all period subdivisions in the history and prehistory of the Americas before the appearance of significant European influences on the American continents spanning the time of the original settlement in the Upper Paleolithic to European colonization during the Early Modern period The term Pre Columbian is used especially often in the context of the great indigenous civilizations of the Americas such as those of Mesoamerica the Olmec the Toltec the Teotihuacano the Zapotec the Mixtec the Aztec and the Maya and the Andes Inca Moche Muisca Canaris Many pre Columbian civilizations established characteristics and hallmarks which included permanent or urban settlements agriculture civic and monumental architecture and complex societal hierarchies Some of these civilizations had long faded by the time of the first permanent European arrivals c late 15th early 16th centuries and are known only through archeological investigations Others were contemporary with this period and are also known from historical accounts of the time A few such as the Maya had their own written records However most Europeans of the time viewed such texts as pagan and much was destroyed in Christian pyres Only a few hidden documents remain today leaving modern historians with glimpses of ancient culture and knowledge 20 Settlement Further information on theories of Paleo Indian migration Settlement of the Americas Map of early human migrations based on the Out of Africa theory 21 The first inhabitants migrated into the Americas from Asia Habitation sites are known in Alaska and Yukon from at least 20 000 years ago with suggested ages of up to 40 000 years 22 23 24 Beyond that the specifics of the Paleo Indian migration to and throughout the Americas including the dates and routes traveled are subject to ongoing research and discussion 25 Widespread habitation of the Americas occurred during the late glacial maximum from 16 000 to 13 000 years ago 24 26 Statue representing the Americas at Palazzo Ferreria in Valletta Malta The traditional theory has been that these early migrants moved into the Beringia land bridge between eastern Siberia and present day Alaska around 40 000 17 000 years ago 27 when sea levels were significantly lowered during the Quaternary glaciation 25 28 These people are believed to have followed herds of now extinct pleistocene megafauna along ice free corridors that stretched between the Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets 29 Another route proposed is that either on foot or using primitive boats they migrated down the Pacific coast to South America 30 Evidence of the latter would since have been covered by a sea level rise of hundreds of meters following the last ice age 31 Both routes may have been taken although the genetic evidences suggests a single founding population 32 The micro satellite diversity and distributions specific to South American Indigenous people indicates that certain populations have been isolated since the initial colonization of the region 33 A second migration occurred after the initial peopling of the Americas 34 Na Dene speakers found predominantly in North American groups at varying genetic rates with the highest frequency found among the Athabaskans at 42 derive from this second wave 35 Linguists and biologists have reached a similar conclusion based on analysis of Amerindian language groups and ABO blood group system distributions 34 36 37 38 Then the people of the Arctic small tool tradition a broad cultural entity that developed along the Alaska Peninsula around Bristol Bay and on the eastern shores of the Bering Strait c 2 500 BCE moved into North America 39 The Arctic small tool tradition a Paleo Eskimo culture branched off into two cultural variants including the Pre Dorset and the Independence traditions of Greenland 40 The descendants of the Pre Dorset cultural group the Dorset culture was displaced by the final migrants from the Bering sea coast line the Thule people the ancestors of modern Inuit by 1000 Common Era CE 40 Norse colonization Main article Norse colonization of North AmericaAround the same time as the Inuit migrated into Greenland Viking settlers began arriving in Greenland in 982 and Vinland shortly thereafter establishing a settlement at L Anse aux Meadows near the northernmost tip of Newfoundland 41 Contact between the Norse colonies and Europe was maintained as James Watson Curran states From 985 to 1410 Greenland was in touch with the world Then silence In 1492 the Vatican noted that no news of that country at the end of the world had been received for 80 years and the bishopric of the colony was offered to a certain ecclesiastic if he would go and restore Christianity there He didn t go 42 Large scale European colonization Main article European colonization of the Americas Christopher Columbus leads expedition to the New World 1492 Although there had been previous trans oceanic contact large scale European colonization of the Americas began with the first voyage of Christopher Columbus in 1492 The first Spanish settlement in the Americas was La Isabela in northern Hispaniola This town was abandoned shortly after in favor of Santo Domingo de Guzman founded in 1496 the oldest American city of European foundation This was the base from which the Spanish monarchy administered its new colonies and their expansion Santo Domingo was subject to frequent raids by English and French pirates During most of the 18th century however privateers from Santo Domingo were the scourge of the Antilles with Dutch British French and Danish vessels as their prizes 43 On the continent Panama City on the Pacific coast of Central America founded on August 15 1519 played an important role being the base for the Spanish conquest of South America Conquistador Lucas Vazquez de Ayllon established San Miguel de Guadalupe the first European settlement in what is now the United States on the Pee Dee River in South Carolina 44 During the first half of the 16th century Spanish colonists conducted raids throughout the Caribbean Basin bringing captives from Central America northern South America and Florida back to Hispaniola and other Spanish settlements 45 France led by Jacques Cartier and Giovanni da Verrazano 46 focused primarily on North America English explorations of the Americas were led by Giovanni Caboto 47 and Sir Walter Raleigh The Dutch in New Netherland confined their operations to Manhattan Island Long Island the Hudson River Valley and what later became New Jersey The spread of new diseases brought by Europeans and African slaves killed many of the inhabitants of North America and South America 48 49 with a general population crash of Native Americans occurring in the mid 16th century often well ahead of European contact 50 One of the most devastating diseases was smallpox 51 European immigrants were often part of state sponsored attempts to found colonies in the Americas Migration continued as people moved to the Americas fleeing religious persecution or seeking economic opportunities Millions of individuals were forcibly transported to the Americas as slaves prisoners or indentured servants Map showing the dates of independence from European powers Black signifies areas that are dependent territories or parts of countries with a capital outside the Americas Decolonization of the Americas began with the American Revolution and the Haitian Revolution in the late 1700s This was followed by numerous Latin American wars of independence in the early 1800s Between 1811 and 1825 Paraguay Argentina Chile Gran Colombia the United Provinces of Central America Mexico Brazil Peru and Bolivia gained independence from Spain and Portugal in armed revolutions After the Dominican Republic won independence from Haiti it was re annexed by Spain in 1861 but reclaimed its independence in 1865 at the conclusion of the Dominican Restoration War The last violent episode of decolonization was the Cuban War of Independence which became the Spanish American War which resulted in the independence of Cuba in 1898 and the transfer of sovereignty over Puerto Rico from Spain to the United States Peaceful decolonization began with the United States s purchase of Louisiana from France in 1803 Florida from Spain in 1819 of Alaska from Russia in 1867 and the Danish West Indies from Denmark in 1916 Canada became independent of the United Kingdom starting with the Balfour Declaration of 1926 Statute of Westminster 1931 and ending with the patriation of the Canadian Constitution in 1982 The Dominion of Newfoundland similarly achieved independence under the Balfour Declaration and Statute of Westminster but relinquished self rule in 1934 52 It was subsequently confederated with Canada in 1949 The remaining European colonies in the Caribbean began to achieve peaceful independence well after World War II Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago became independent in 1962 and Guyana and Barbados both achieved independence in 1966 In the 1970s the Bahamas Grenada Dominica St Lucia and St Vincent and the Grenadines all became independent of the United Kingdom and Suriname became independent of the Netherlands Belize Antigua and Barbuda and Saint Kitts and Nevis achieved independence from the United Kingdom in the 1980s GeographyFurther information Geography of North America and Geography of South America Satellite photo of the Americas on Earth Extent The Americas make up most of the land in Earth s Western Hemisphere 53 The northernmost point of the Americas is Kaffeklubben Island which is the most northerly point of land on Earth 54 The southernmost point is the islands of Southern Thule although they are sometimes considered part of Antarctica 55 The mainland of the Americas is the world s longest north to south landmass The distance between its two polar extremities Murchison Promontory on the Boothia Peninsula in northern Canada and Cape Froward in Chilean Patagonia is roughly 14 000 km 8 700 mi 56 The mainland s most westerly point is the end of the Seward Peninsula in Alaska Attu Island further off the Alaskan coast to the west is considered the westernmost point of the Americas Ponta do Seixas in northeastern Brazil forms the easternmost extremity of the mainland 56 while Nordostrundingen in Greenland is the most easterly point of the continental shelf Geology South America broke off from the west of the supercontinent Gondwana around 135 million years ago forming its own continent 57 Around 15 million years ago the collision of the Caribbean Plate and the Pacific Plate resulted in the emergence of a series of volcanoes along the border that created a number of islands The gaps in the archipelago of Central America filled in with material eroded off North America and South America plus new land created by continued volcanism By three million years ago the continents of North America and South America were linked by the Isthmus of Panama thereby forming the single landmass of the Americas 58 The Great American Interchange resulted in many species being spread across the Americas such as the cougar porcupine opossums armadillos and hummingbirds 59 Topography Aconcagua in Argentina is the highest peak in the Americas The geography of the western Americas is dominated by the American Cordillera with the Andes running along the west coast of South America 60 and the Rocky Mountains and other North American Cordillera ranges running along the western side of North America 61 The 2 300 kilometer long 1 400 mi Appalachian Mountains run along the east coast of North America from Alabama to Newfoundland 62 North of the Appalachians the Arctic Cordillera runs along the eastern coast of Canada 63 The largest mountain ranges are the Andes and Rocky Mountains The Sierra Nevada and the Cascade Range reach similar altitudes as the Rocky Mountains but are significantly smaller In North America the greatest number of fourteeners are in the United States and more specifically in the U S state of Colorado The highest peaks of the Americas are located in the Andes with Aconcagua of Argentina being the highest in North America Denali Mount McKinley in the U S state of Alaska is the tallest Between its coastal mountain ranges North America has vast flat areas The Interior Plains spread over much of the continent with low relief 64 The Canadian Shield covers almost 5 million km2 of North America and is generally quite flat 65 Similarly the north east of South America is covered by the flat Amazon basin 66 The Brazilian Highlands on the east coast are fairly smooth but show some variations in landform while farther south the Gran Chaco and Pampas are broad lowlands 67 Climate Climate zones of the Americas in the Koppen climate classification system The climate of the Americas varies significantly from region to region Tropical rainforest climate occurs in the latitudes of the Amazon American cloud forests southeastern Florida and Darien Gap In the Rocky Mountains and Andes dry and continental climates are observed Often the higher altitudes of these mountains are snow capped Southeastern North America is well known for its occurrence of tornadoes and hurricanes of which the vast majority of tornadoes occur in the United States Tornado Alley 68 as well as in the southerly Dixie Alley in the North American late winter and early spring seasons Often parts of the Caribbean are exposed to the violent effects of hurricanes These weather systems are formed by the collision of dry cool air from Canada and wet warm air from the Atlantic Hydrology With coastal mountains and interior plains the Americas have several large river basins that drain the continents The largest river basin in North America is that of the Mississippi covering the second largest watershed on the planet 69 The Mississippi Missouri river system drains most of 31 states of the U S most of the Great Plains and large areas between the Rocky and Appalachian mountains This river is the fourth longest in the world and tenth most powerful in the world In North America to the east of the Appalachian Mountains there are no major rivers but rather a series of rivers and streams that flow east with their terminus in the Atlantic Ocean such as the Hudson River Saint John River and Savannah River A similar instance arises with central Canadian rivers that drain into Hudson Bay the largest being the Churchill River On the west coast of North America the main rivers are the Colorado River Columbia River Yukon River Fraser River and Sacramento River The Colorado River drains much of the Southern Rockies and parts of the Basin and Range Province The river flows approximately 1 450 miles 2 330 km into the Gulf of California 70 during which over time it has carved out natural phenomena such as the Grand Canyon and created phenomena such as the Salton Sea The Columbia is a large river 1 243 miles 2 000 km long in central western North America and is the most powerful river on the West Coast of the Americas In the far northwest of North America the Yukon drains much of the Alaskan peninsula and flows 1 980 miles 3 190 km 71 from parts of Yukon and the Northwest Territory to the Pacific Draining to the Arctic Ocean of Canada the Mackenzie River drains waters from the Arctic Great Lakes of Arctic Canada as opposed to the Saint Lawrence River that drains the Great Lakes of Southern Canada into the Atlantic Ocean The Mackenzie River is the largest in Canada and drains 1 805 200 square kilometers 697 000 sq mi 72 The largest river basin in South America is that of the Amazon which has the highest volume flow of any river on Earth 73 The second largest watershed of South America is that of the Parana River which covers about 2 5 million km2 74 Ecology North America and South America began to develop a shared population of flora and fauna around 2 5 million years ago when continental drift brought the two continents into contact via the Isthmus of Panama Initially the exchange of biota was roughly equal with North American genera migrating into South America in about the same proportions as South American genera migrated into North America This exchange is known as the Great American Interchange The exchange became lopsided after roughly a million years with the total spread of South American genera into North America far more limited in scope than the spread on North American genera into South America 75 Countries and territoriesSee also List of sovereign states and dependent territories in the Americas There are 35 sovereign states in the Americas as well as an autonomous country of Denmark three overseas departments of France three overseas collectivities of France 76 and one uninhabited territory of France eight overseas territories of the United Kingdom three constituent countries of the Netherlands three public bodies of the Netherlands two unincorporated territories of the United States and one uninhabited territory of the United States 77 Country or territory Total area km2 78 Population note 1 Pop density per km2 Common languages official in bold Capital Anguilla United Kingdom 91 13 452 164 8 English The Valley Antigua and Barbuda 442 86 295 199 1 Creole 79 English St John s Argentina 2 766 890 42 669 500 14 3 Spanish Buenos Aires Aruba Netherlands 180 101 484 594 4 Papiamentu Spanish 80 Dutch Oranjestad Bahamas The 13 943 351 461 24 5 Creole 81 English Nassau Barbados 430 285 000 595 3 Bajan 82 English Bridgetown Belize 22 966 349 728 13 4 Spanish Kriol English 83 Belmopan Bermuda United Kingdom 54 64 237 1 203 7 English Hamilton Bolivia 1 098 580 10 027 254 8 4 Spanish and 36 indigenous languages La Paz and Sucre 84 Bonaire Netherlands 294 12 093 41 1 Papiamentu Spanish Dutch 85 Kralendijk Bouvet Island Norway 86 49 0 0 Uninhabited Brazil 8 514 877 203 106 000 23 6 Portuguese Brasilia British Virgin Islands United Kingdom 151 29 537 152 3 English Road Town Canada 9 984 670 37 411 592 3 8 English French Ottawa Cayman Islands United Kingdom 264 55 456 212 1 English George Town Chile 87 756 950 17 773 000 22 Spanish Santiago Clipperton Island France 6 88 0 89 0 0 Uninhabited Colombia 1 138 910 47 757 000 40 Spanish Bogota Costa Rica 51 100 4 667 096 89 6 Spanish San Jose Cuba 109 886 11 167 325 102 0 Spanish Havana Curacao Netherlands 444 150 563 317 1 Papiamentu Dutch 85 Willemstad Dominica 751 71 293 89 2 French Patois English 90 Roseau Dominican Republic 48 671 10 378 267 207 3 Spanish Santo Domingo Ecuador 283 560 15 819 400 53 8 Spanish Quechua 91 Quito El Salvador 21 041 6 401 240 293 0 Spanish San Salvador Falkland Islands United Kingdom 92 12 173 3 000 0 26 English Stanley French Guiana France 91 000 237 549 2 7 French Cayenne Greenland Kingdom of Denmark 2 166 086 56 483 0 026 Greenlandic Danish Nuuk Grenada 344 103 328 302 3 English St George s Guadeloupe France 1 628 405 739 246 7 French Basse Terre Guatemala 108 889 15 806 675 128 8 Spanish Garifuna and 23 Mayan languages Guatemala City Guyana 214 999 784 894 3 5 English Georgetown Haiti 27 750 10 745 665 361 5 Creole French Port au Prince Honduras 112 492 8 555 072 66 4 Spanish Tegucigalpa Jamaica 10 991 2 717 991 247 4 Patois English Kingston Martinique France 1 128 392 291 352 6 Patois 93 French Fort de France Mexico 1 964 375 119 713 203 57 1 Spanish 68 indigenous languages Mexico City Montserrat United Kingdom 102 4 922 58 8 Creole English English 94 Plymouth Brades 95 Navassa Island United States Haiti 5 88 0 89 0 0 Uninhabited Nicaragua 130 373 6 071 045 44 1 Spanish Managua Panama 75 417 3 405 813 45 8 Spanish Panama City Paraguay 406 750 6 783 374 15 6 Guarani Spanish Asuncion Peru 1 285 220 30 814 175 22 Spanish Quechua and other indigenous languages Lima Puerto Rico United States 8 870 3 615 086 448 9 Spanish English San Juan Saba Netherlands 13 1 537 96 118 2 English Dutch The Bottom Saint Barthelemy France 21 88 8 938 89 354 7 French Gustavia Saint Kitts and Nevis 261 55 000 199 2 English Basseterre Saint Lucia 539 180 000 319 1 English French Creole Castries Saint Martin France 54 88 36 979 552 2 French Marigot Saint Pierre and Miquelon France 242 6 081 24 8 French Saint Pierre Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 389 109 000 280 2 English Kingstown Sint Eustatius Netherlands 21 2 739 96 130 4 Dutch English Oranjestad Sint Maarten Netherlands 34 37 429 1 176 7 English Spanish Dutch Philipsburg South Georgia andSouth Sandwich Islands UK 97 3 093 20 0 01 English Grytviken Suriname 163 270 534 189 3 Dutch and others 98 Paramaribo Trinidad and Tobago 5 130 1 328 019 261 0 English Port of Spain Turks and Caicos Islands UK 948 31 458 34 8 Creole English English 99 Cockburn Town United States of America note 2 9 629 091 320 206 000 34 2 English Washington D C U S Virgin Islands United States 347 106 405 317 0 English Charlotte Amalie Uruguay 176 220 3 286 314 19 4 Spanish Montevideo Venezuela 916 445 30 206 307 30 2 Spanish and 40 indigenous languages CaracasTotal 42 320 985 973 186 925 21 9DemographyPopulation Further information List of countries in the Americas by population In 2021 the total population of the Americas was about 1 03 billion people divided as follows North America 596 6 million includes Central America and the Caribbean South America 434 3 millionLargest urban centers See also Largest cities in the Americas and List of metropolitan areas in the Americas by population There are three urban centers that each hold titles for being the largest population area based on the three main demographic concepts 100 City properA city proper is the locality with legally fixed boundaries and an administratively recognized urban status that is usually characterized by some form of local government 101 102 103 104 105 Urban areaAn urban area is characterized by higher population density and vast human features in comparison to areas surrounding it Urban areas may be cities towns or conurbations but the term is not commonly extended to rural settlements such as villages and hamlets Urban areas are created and further developed by the process of urbanization and do not include large swaths of rural land as do metropolitan areas citation needed Metropolitan areaUnlike an urban area a metropolitan area includes not only the urban area but also satellite cities plus intervening rural land that is socio economically connected to the urban core city typically by employment ties through commuting with the urban core city being the primary labor market citation needed In accordance with these definitions the three largest population centers in the Americas are Mexico City anchor to the largest metropolitan area in the Americas New York City anchor to the largest urban area in the Americas and Sao Paulo the largest city proper in the Americas All three cities maintain Alpha classification and large scale influence Urban centers within the Americas Mexico City largest metropolitan area in the Americas with a population of 22 300 000 in 2017 Sao Paulo largest city in the Americas with a population of 12 038 175 city in 2016 New York City largest urban area in the Americas with a population of 18 351 295 in 2010Country City City Population Metro Area PopulationMexico Mexico City 8 864 000 22 300 000 106 Brazil Sao Paulo 12 038 175 21 742 939 107 United States New York City 8 405 837 108 19 949 502 109 Argentina Buenos Aires 2 891 082 13 15 594 428 13 United States Los Angeles 3 928 864 110 13 131 431 111 Ethnology This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The population of the Americas is made up of the descendants of four large ethnic groups and their combinations The Indigenous peoples of the Americas being Amerindians and Inuit Yupik Unangan Those of European ancestry mainly Spanish English Irish Portuguese German Italian French and Dutch Those of African ancestry mainly of West African descent Asians that is those of East Asian South Asian and Southeast Asian ancestry Mestizos Metis people in Canada those of mixed European and Amerindian ancestry Mulattoes people of mixed African and European ancestry Zambos Spanish or Cafuzos Portuguese those of mixed African and Indigenous ancestry The majority of the population live in Latin America named for its predominant cultures rooted in Latin Europe including the two dominant languages Spanish and Portuguese both Romance languages more specifically in the Iberian nations of Portugal and Spain hence the use of the term Ibero America as a synonym Latin America is typically contrasted with Anglo America where English a Germanic language is prevalent and which comprises Canada with the exception of Francophone Canada rooted in Latin Europe France see Quebec and Acadia and the United States Both countries are located in North America with cultures deriving predominantly from Anglo Saxon and other Germanic roots Religion Further information Religion in Latin America Religion in North America Christianity in the Americas and Islam in the Americas The most prevalent faiths in the Americas are as follows Christianity 86 percent 112 Roman Catholicism Practiced by 69 percent 113 of the Latin American population 61 percent 113 in Brazil whose Roman Catholic population of 134 million 114 is the greatest of any nation s approximately 24 percent of the United States population 115 and about 39 percent of Canada s 116 Protestantism Practiced mostly in the United States where half of the population are Protestant Canada with slightly more than a quarter of the population and Greenland there is a growing contingent of Evangelical and Pentecostal movements in predominantly Catholic Latin America 117 Eastern Orthodoxy Found mostly in the United States 1 percent and Canada this Christian group is growing faster than many other Christian groups in Canada and now represents roughly 3 percent of the Canadian population 116 Non denominational Christians and other Christians some 1 000 different Christian denominations and sects practiced in the Americas Irreligion About 12 percent including atheists and agnostics as well as those who profess some form of spirituality but do not identify themselves as members of any organized religion Islam Together Muslims constitute about 1 percent of the North American population and 0 3 percent of all Latin Americans It is practiced by 3 percent 116 of Canadians and 0 6 percent of the U S population 115 Argentina has the largest Muslim population in Latin America with up to 600 000 persons or 1 5 percent of the population 118 Judaism practiced by 2 percent of North Americans approximately 2 5 percent of the U S population and 1 2 percent of Canadians 119 and 0 23 percent of Latin Americans Argentina has the largest Jewish population in Latin America with 200 000 members 120 Other faiths include Buddhism Hinduism Sikhism Bahaʼi Faith a wide variety of indigenous religions many of which can be categorized as animistic new age religions and many African and African derived religions Syncretic faiths can also be found throughout the Americas Religious Demographics According to 2010 censuses estimates in each country Country Christians Catholics Protestants None Atheists Agnostics OthersArgentina 121 86 2 76 5 9 7 11 3 2 5 Bolivia 95 3 73 7 21 6 3 7 1 0 Brazil 122 86 8 64 6 22 2 8 4 4 8 Canada 116 62 6 38 7 23 9 28 5 8 9 Chile 123 76 0 60 0 16 0 21 0 3 0 Colombia 124 93 9 80 3 13 6 5 2 1 7 Costa Rica 125 84 3 70 5 13 8 11 3 4 3 Dominican Republic 126 87 1 68 3 18 8 10 6 2 2 Ecuador 127 95 6 87 8 7 7 3 5 1 0 El Salvador 128 75 5 45 8 29 7 24 3 1 2 Guatemala 129 79 3 47 6 31 7 18 3 2 4 Honduras 130 83 0 47 9 35 1 14 3 2 7 Mexico 131 92 2 82 7 8 7 4 9 2 9 Nicaragua 132 81 1 54 3 26 8 16 8 2 1 Panama 90 0 75 0 15 0 7 0 3 0 Paraguay 96 8 90 4 6 4 1 4 1 8 Peru 133 96 7 81 3 12 5 1 9 1 4 United States 134 79 9 25 9 54 0 15 2 5 0 Uruguay 135 58 2 47 1 11 1 40 4 1 5 Venezuela 136 89 0 72 0 17 0 8 0 3 0 Languages Main articles Indigenous languages of the Americas Languages of North America and Languages of South America Languages spoken in the Americas Various languages are spoken in the Americas Some are of European origin others are spoken by indigenous peoples or are the mixture of various languages like the different creoles 125 The most widely spoken first language in the Americas is Spanish followed by English and Brazilian Portuguese 137 The dominant language of Latin America is Spanish though the most populous nation in Latin America Brazil speaks Portuguese Small enclaves of French Dutch and English speaking regions also exist in Latin America notably in French Guiana Suriname and Belize and Guyana respectively Haitian Creole is dominant in the nation of Haiti where French is also spoken Native languages are more prominent in Latin America than in Anglo America with Nahuatl Quechua Aymara and Guarani as the most common Various other native languages are spoken with less frequency across both Anglo America and Latin America Creole languages other than Haitian Creole are also spoken in parts of Latin America The dominant language of Anglo America is English French is also official in Canada where it is the predominant language in Quebec and an official language in New Brunswick along with English It is also an important language in Louisiana and in parts of New Hampshire Maine and Vermont Spanish has kept an ongoing presence in the Southwestern United States which formed part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain especially in California and New Mexico where a distinct variety of Spanish spoken since the 17th century has survived It has more recently become widely spoken in other parts of the United States because of heavy immigration from Latin America High levels of immigration in general have brought great linguistic diversity to Anglo America with over 300 languages known to be spoken in the United States alone but most languages are spoken only in small enclaves and by relatively small immigrant groups The nations of Guyana Suriname and Belize are generally considered by whom not to fall into either Anglo America or Latin America because of their language differences from Latin America geographic differences from Anglo America and cultural and historical differences from both regions English is the primary language of Guyana and Belize and Dutch is the primary language of Suriname Most of the non native languages have to different degrees evolved differently from the mother country but are usually still mutually intelligible Some have combined however which has even resulted in completely new languages such as Papiamento which is a combination of Portuguese Spanish Dutch representing the respective colonizers native Arawak various African languages and more recently English The lingua franca Portunol a mixture of Portuguese and Spanish is spoken in the border regions of Brazil and neighboring Spanish speaking countries 138 More specifically Riverense Portunol is spoken by around 100 000 people in the border regions of Brazil and Uruguay Because of immigration there are many communities where other languages are spoken from all parts of the world especially in the United States Brazil Argentina Canada Chile Costa Rica and Uruguay very important destinations for immigrants 139 140 141 TerminologySubdivisions of the AmericasMap Legend North America NA South America SA May be included in either NA or SA North America NA May be included in NA Central America Caribbean South America North America NA May be included in NA Northern America Middle America MA Caribbean may be included in MA South America SA May be included in MA or SA Anglo America A A May be included in A A Latin America LA May be included in LAFurther information Americas terminology English Main article American word Speakers of English generally refer to the landmasses of North America and South America as the Americas the Western Hemisphere or the New World 5 The adjective American may be used to indicate something pertains to the Americas 2 but this term is primarily used in English to indicate something pertaining to the United States 2 142 143 Some non ambiguous alternatives exist such as the adjective Pan American 144 or New Worlder as a demonym for a resident of the closely related New World 3 Use of America in the hemispherical sense is sometimes retained or can occur when translated from other languages 145 For example the Association of National Olympic Committees ANOC in Paris maintains a single continental association for America represented by one of the five Olympic rings 146 American essayist H L Mencken said The Latin Americans use Norteamericano in formal writing but save in Panama prefer nicknames in colloquial speech 147 To avoid American one can use constructed terms in their languages derived from United States or even North America 143 148 149 In Canada its southern neighbor is often referred to as the United States the U S A or informally the States while U S citizens are generally referred to as Americans 143 Most Canadians resent being referred to as Americans 143 Spanish In Spanish America is a single continent composed of the subcontinents of America del Sur and America del Norte the land bridge of America Central and the islands of the Antillas Americano or americana in Spanish refers to a person from America in a similar way that in which europeo or europea refers to a person from Europa The terms sudamericano a centroamericano a antillano a and norteamericano a can be used to more specifically refer to the location where a person may live Citizens of the United States of America are normally referred to by the term estadounidense rough literal translation United Statesian instead of americano or americana which is discouraged 150 151 and the country s name itself is officially translated as Estados Unidos de America United States of America commonly abbreviated as Estados Unidos EEUU 151 Also the term norteamericano North American may refer to a citizen of the United States This term is primarily used to refer to citizens of the United States and less commonly to those of other North American countries 150 Portuguese In Portuguese America 152 is a single continent composed of America do Sul South America America Central Central America and America do Norte North America 153 It can be ambiguous as America can be used to refer to the United States of America but is avoided in print and formal environments 154 155 French In French the word americain may be used for things relating to the Americas however similar to English it is most often used for things relating to the United States with the term etats unien sometimes used for clarity Panamericain may be used as an adjective to refer to the Americas without ambiguity 156 French speakers may use the noun Amerique to refer to the whole landmass as one continent or two continents Amerique du Nord and Amerique du Sud In French Amerique is seldom used to refer to the United States leading to some ambiguity when it is Similar to English usage les Ameriques or des Ameriques is used to refer unambiguously to the Americas Dutch In Dutch the word Amerika mostly refers to the United States 157 158 Although the United States is equally often referred to as de Verenigde Staten the United States or de VS the US Amerika relatively rarely refers to the Americas but it is the only commonly used Dutch word for the Americas This often leads to ambiguity and to stress that something concerns the Americas as a whole Dutch uses a combination namely Noord en Zuid Amerika North and South America Latin America and Central America are generally referred to as Latijns Amerika and Midden Amerika respectively The adjective Amerikaans is most often used for things or people relating to the United States There are no alternative words to distinguish between things relating to the United States or to the Americas Dutch uses the local alternative for things relating to elsewhere in the Americas such as Argentijns for Argentine etc Multinational organizationsThe following is a list of multinational organizations in the Americas Alliance for Progress American Capital of Culture Andean Community of Nations Association of Caribbean States Bank of the South Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas Caribbean Community CARICOM Single Market and Economy Central American Common Market Central American Parliament Community of Latin American and Caribbean States Contadora Group Free Trade Area of the Americas Latin American Free Trade Agreement Latin American Parliament or Parlatino Mercosur or Mercosul North Atlantic Treaty Organization Organization of American States Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States Organization of Ibero American States Pacific Alliance Pan American Sports Organization Regional Security System Rio Group School of the Americas Summit of the Americas Union of South American Nations United States Mexico Canada Agreement YOA Orchestra of the AmericasEconomyMain articles Economy of North America Latin American economy and Economy of South America See also List of North American countries by GDP nominal and List of North American countries by GDP PPP See also List of Latin American and Caribbean countries by GDP PPP Rank Country GDP nominal peak year millions of USD 159 Peak year1 United States 25 035 164 20222 Brazil 2 614 027 20113 Canada 2 200 352 20224 Mexico 1 424 533 20225 Argentina 643 861 20176 Colombia 382 094 20137 Venezuela 372 750 20128 Chile 316 770 20219 Peru 239 333 202210 Puerto Rico 118 677 2022Rank Country GDP PPP peak year millions of USD Peak year1 United States 25 035 164 20222 Brazil 3 782 763 20223 Mexico 2 919 875 20224 Canada 2 240 390 20225 Argentina 1 195 581 20226 Colombia 964 743 20227 Chile 575 516 20228 Venezuela 561 817 20139 Peru 521 841 202210 Dominican Republic 256 446 2022 In exports and imports in 2020 the United States was the world s second largest exporter US 1 64 trillion and the largest importer US 2 56 trillion Mexico was the tenth largest exporter and importer Canada was the twelfth largest exporter and importer Brazil was the 24th largest exporter and the 28th largest importer Chile was the 45th largest exporter and the 47th largest importer Argentina was the 46th largest exporter and the 52nd largest importer Colombia was the 54th largest exporter and the 51st largest importer among others 160 161 162 The agriculture of the continent is very strong and varied Countries such as United States Brazil Canada Mexico and Argentina are among the largest agricultural producers on the planet In 2019 the continent dominated the world production of soy almost 90 of the world total with Brazil the United States Argentina Paraguay Canada and Bolivia among the 10 largest on the planet sugarcane about 55 of the world total with Brazil Mexico the United States and Guatemala among the 10 largest on the planet coffee about 55 of the world total with Brazil Colombia Honduras Peru and Guatemala among the 10 largest on the planet and maize about 48 of the world total with the United States Brazil Argentina and Mexico among the 10 largest on the planet The continent also produces almost 40 of world s orange with Brazil the US and Mexico among the top 10 producers about 37 of world s pineapple with Costa Rica Brazil Mexico and Colombia among the 10 largest producers about 35 of world s lemon with Mexico Argentina Brazil and the United States among the 10 largest producers and about 30 of world s cotton with the US Brazil Mexico and Argentina among the top 10 producers among several other products 163 In livestock America also has giant productions In 2018 the continent produced around 45 of the world s beef with the US Brazil Argentina Mexico and Canada among the world s 10 largest producers about 36 of the world s chicken meat with the US Brazil and Mexico among the world s 10 largest producers and about 28 of the world s cow s milk with the US and Brazil among the 10 largest producers in the world among other products 163 In industrial terms the World Bank lists the top producing countries each year based on the total value of production According to the 2019 list the United States has the second most valuable industry in the world US 2 3 trillion Mexico has the 12th most valuable industry in the world US 217 8 billion Brazil has the 13th most valuable industry valuable in the world US 173 6 billion Canada has the 15th most valuable industry in the world US 151 7 billion Venezuela the 30th largest US 58 2 billion but depends on the oil to obtain this amount Argentina was the 31st largest US 57 7 billion Colombia the 46th largest US 35 4 billion Peru the 50th largest 28 7 billion and Chile the 51st largest US 28 3 billion among others 164 In the production of oil the continent had 8 of the 30 largest world producers in 2020 United States 1st Canada 4th Brazil 8th Mexico 14th Colombia 20th Venezuela 26th Ecuador 27th and Argentina 28th 165 In the production of natural gas the continent had 8 of the 32 largest world producers in 2015 United States 1st Canada 5th Argentina 18th Trinidad and Tobago 20th Mexico 21st Venezuela 28th Bolivia 31st and Brazil 32nd 166 167 In the production of coal the continent had 5 of the 30 largest world producers in 2018 United States 3rd Colombia 12th Canada 13th Mexico 24th and Brazil 27th 168 In the production of vehicles the continent had 5 of the 30 largest world producers in 2019 United States 2nd Mexico 7th Brazil 9th Canada 12th and Argentina 28th 169 In the production of steel the continent had 5 of the 31 largest world producers in 2019 United States 4th Brazil 9th Mexico 15th Canada 18th and Argentina 31st 170 171 In mining the continent has large productions of gold mainly in the United States Canada Peru Mexico Brazil and Argentina 172 silver mainly in Mexico Peru Chile Bolivia Argentina and the USA 173 copper mainly in Chile Peru USA Mexico and Brazil 174 platinum Canada and US 175 iron ore Brazil Canada USA Peru and Chile 176 zinc Peru USA Mexico Bolivia Canada and Brazil 177 molybdenum Chile Peru Mexico Canada USA 178 lithium Chile Argentina Brazil and Canada 179 lead Peru USA Mexico and Bolivia 180 bauxite Brazil Jamaica Canada and USA 181 tin Peru Bolivia and Brazil 182 manganese Brazil and Mexico 183 antimony Bolivia Mexico Guatemala Canada and Ecuador 184 nickel Canada Brazil Dominican Republic Cuba and USA 185 niobium Brazil and Canada 186 rhenium Chile and USA 187 and iodine Chile 188 among others Dominica Panama and the Dominican Republic have the fastest growing economy in the Americas according to the International Monetary Fund IMF 189 16 five to seven countries in the southern part of the Americas had weakening economies in decline compared to only three countries in the northern part of the Americas 190 191 Haiti has the lowest GDP per capita in the Americas although its economy was growing slightly as of 2016 update 190 191 See also Geography portal North America portal South America portalAmerrisque Mountains Abya Yala Indigenous name for the North and South American continents British North America Columbia name Ethnic groups in Central America French America Indigenous Peoples Day La Merika List of conflicts in the Americas List of former sovereign states List of oldest buildings in the Americas Monarchies in the Americas New Sweden Pan Americanism Pan American Highway Pan American Games Personification of the Americas Southern ConeNotes See List of countries by population for references Includes the states of Hawaii and Alaska which are both separated from the US mainland with Hawaii distant from the North American landmass in the Pacific Ocean and therefore more commonly associated with the other territories of Oceania while Alaska is located between Canada and Asia Russia References Population United Nations Retrieved July 25 2021 a b c American Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required a b New Worlder Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required a b c d America The Oxford Companion to the English Language ISBN 0 19 214183 X McArthur Tom ed 1992 New York Oxford 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World Economic Outlook International Monetary Fund Retrieved September 25 2017 Further reading Americas The Columbia Gazetteer of the World Online 2006 New York Columbia University Press Americas Encyclopaedia Britannica 15th ed 1986 ISBN 0 85229 434 4 Chicago Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Burchfield R W 2004 Fowler s Modern English Usage ISBN 0 19 861021 1 Oxford University Press Churchill Ward A Little Matter of Genocide 1997 City Lights Books ISBN 0 87286 323 9 Fee Margery and McAlpine J 1997 Oxford Guide to Canadian English Usage ISBN 0 19 541619 8 Toronto Oxford University Press Kane Katie 1999 Nits Make Lice Drogheda Sand Creek and the Poetics of Colonial Extermination Cultural Critique 42 42 81 103 doi 10 2307 1354592 JSTOR 1354592 Pearsall Judy and Trumble Bill ed 2002 Oxford English Reference Dictionary 2nd ed rev ISBN 0 19 860652 4 Oxford UK Oxford University Press What s the difference between North Latin Central Middle South Spanish and Anglo America Archived April 10 2016 at the Wayback Machine Geography at about com External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to America Look up americas in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Americas United Nations population data by latest available Census 2008 2009 Organization of American States Council on Hemispheric Affairs Gannett Henry Ingersoll Ernest Winship George Parker 1905 America and others New International Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Americas amp oldid 1146149885, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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