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Chaco Province

Chaco (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈtʃako]; Wichi: To-kós-wet[3]), officially the Province of Chaco (Spanish: provincia del Chaco [pɾoˈβinsja ðel ˈtʃako]), is one of the 23 provinces in Argentina. Its capital and largest city, is Resistencia.[4] It is located in the north-east of the country.

Chaco
Provincia del Chaco
Province of Chaco
Palm trees in Resistencia City
Location of Chaco within Argentina
Country Argentina
Official LanguagesSpanish, Kom, Moqoit and Wichí
Capital and largest cityResistencia
Government
 • GovernorJorge Capitanich (PJ)
 • Vice GovernorAnalía Rach Quiroga (PJ)
 • Legislature32
 • National Deputies7
 • National SenatorsInés Pilatti Vergara (FDT)
Antonio José Rodas (FDT)
Víctor Zimmermann (JXC)
Area
 • Total99,633 km2 (38,469 sq mi)
Population
 (2022 census)[1]
 • Total1,142,963
 • Rank11th
 • Density11/km2 (30/sq mi)
Demonym(s)Chacoan, chaqueño
Time zoneUTC−3 (ART)
ISO 3166 codeAR-H
HDI (2019)0.820 Very High (24th)[2]
Websitewww.chaco.gov.ar

It is bordered by Salta and Santiago del Estero to the west, Formosa to the north, Corrientes to the east, and Santa Fe to the south.[4] It also has an international border with the Paraguayan Department of Ñeembucú. With an area of 99,633 km2 (38,469 sq mi), and a population of 1,142,963 as of 2022, it is the twelfth most extensive, and the eleventh most populated, of the twenty-three Argentine provinces.

In 2010, Chaco became the second province in Argentina to adopt more than one official language. These languages are the Kom, Moqoit and Wichí languages, spoken by the Toba, Mocovi and Wichí peoples respectively. Chaco has historically been among Argentina's poorest regions, and currently ranks last both by per capita GDP and on the Human Development Index.

Etymology

Chaco derives from chaku, the Quechua word used to name a hunting territory or the hunting technique used by the people of the Inca Empire.

Annually, large groups of up to thirty thousand hunters would enter the territory, forming columns and circling their prey.[5]Jesuit missioner Pedro Lozano wrote in his book Chorographic Description of the Great Chaco Gualamba, published in Cordoba, Spain in 1733: "Its etymology indicates the multitude of nations that inhabit that region. When they go hunting, the Indians gather from many parts the vicuñas and guanacos; that crowd is called chacu in the Quechua language, which is common in Peru, and that Spaniards have corrupted into Chaco".[6]

However, the earliest known mention of the term in a document was in a letter written to Fernando Torres de Portugal y Mesía, Viceroy of Peru, dated in 1589, by the then Governor of Tucumán, Juan Ramírez de Velasco, who referred to the region as Chaco Gualamba.[7] (The term Gualamba is of uncertain origin and has since fallen into disuse.[7])

Geography

 
Dock on a southeastern wetland close to Paraná River

The province of Chaco lies within the southern part of the Gran Chaco region, a vast lowland plain that covers territories in Argentina, Paraguay, and Bolivia.

Chaco Province covers an area of 99,633 km2 (38,469 sq mi) and ranks as the twelfth largest Argentinian province. The highest ground in the province is also the most western, near the municipality of Taco Pozo, at an elevation of 272 m (892 ft) above sea level.[8]

The Paraná and Paraguay rivers separate Chaco province from Corrientes Province and the Republic of Paraguay. To the north, the river Bermejo forms another natural border, dividing Chaco Province from Formosa Province.

In the south, the border follows the 28th parallel south, separating the region from Santa Fe Province, while in the west it borders Salta and Santiago del Estero.

Other important rivers include: the Negro, Tapenagá, Palometa, and Salado, all tributaries or anabranches of the river Paraná.

Climate

 
Köppen climate map of Chaco, Argentina

The province has a subtropical climate.[9] It is divided in two different climate zones: a more humid one in the east and a drier subtropical climate in the center and west.[10] The eastern parts of the province have a humid subtropical climate (Cfa under the Köppen climate classification) with no dry season.[11] In the west where precipitation is lower, it has a subtropical climate with a dry winter and is classified as a semi-arid climate (BS under the Köppen climate classification) due to potential evapotranspiration exceeding precipitation.[11]

Precipitation

In the most humid (eastern) parts of the province, precipitation falls throughout the year with no dry season.[11] These areas receive around 1,400 millimetres (55 in) of precipitation per year.[11] Precipitation decreases westwards and become more concentrated in the summer months.[9][11]

Temperature

Mean annual temperatures range between 21 to 23 °C (70 to 73 °F) which decreases from north to south.[11] Summers are hot with temperatures that can reach up to 38 to 41 °C (100 to 106 °F) in the eastern parts of the province.[11] The western parts experience more variation in temperatures due continental influences;[9] extreme temperatures in summer are more extreme with temperatures that frequently exceed 40 °C (104 °F).[11] During winters, incursions of cold, polar air from the south can lead to frosts and temperatures that fall below freezing.[11] Being under an area of high solar radiation during summer, a consequence is that a low pressure system forms over the province during summer.[11]

Humidity

Humidity in the province is high due to its climate, particularly in the north, the wettest portion of the province.[11] Most of the winds that transport humid air come from the north and east.[11] Winters are the most humid seasons (high humidity) due to this season being characterized by frequent fogs.[11]

History

 
La Sabana and its new railway station in 1899
 
Territorial Governor's House

The area was originally inhabited by various hunter-gatherers speaking languages from the Mataco-Guaicru family. Native tribes including the Toba, and Wichí survive in the region and have important communities in this province as well as in Formosa Province.

In 1576, the governor of a province in Northern Argentina commissioned the military to search for a huge mass of iron, which he had heard that natives used for their weapons. The natives called the area Heavenly Fields, which was translated into Spanish as Campo del Cielo. This area is now a protected region situated on the border between the provinces of Chaco and Santiago del Estero where a group of iron meteorites fell in a Holocene impact event some four to five thousand years ago. In 2015, Police arrested four alleged smugglers trying to steal over a ton of legally protected meteoric iron.[12]

The first European settlement was founded by Spanish conquistador Alonso de Vera y Aragón, in 1585, and was called Concepción de Nuestra Señora. It was abandoned in 1632. During its existence, it was one of the most important cities in the region, but attacks from local Indians forced the residents to leave. In the 17th century, the San Fernando del Río Negro Jesuit mission was founded in the area of the modern-day city of Resistencia, but it was abandoned fifteen years later.

The Gran Chaco region remained largely unexplored, and uninhabited, by either Europeans or Argentines until the late 19th century, after numerous confrontations between Argentina and Paraguay during the War of the Triple Alliance. San Fernando was re-established as a military outpost, and was renamed Resistencia in 1876.

The Territorio Nacional del Gran Chaco was established in 1872. This territory, which included the current Formosa Province and lands presently inside Paraguay, was superseded by Territorio Nacional del Chaco upon its administrative division, in 1884.

20th century

 
The Provincial Government House. Designed in 1955, political disputes delayed its completion until 1972.

Between the end of the nineteenth and the first decades of the twentieth centuries, the province received a variety of immigrants, among them Volga Germans and Mennonites from Russia, Germany, and Canada. They, alongside other immigrants, transformed Chaco into a productive farming region known for its dairy and beef production.

Political structure

In 1951 the territory became a province, and its name was changed to Provincia Presidente Perón. The province was renamed again in 1955 when the government of President Juan Perón was overthrown, returning to the historical name of Chaco. Chaco voters, however, continued to support Peronist candidates in subsequent elections, notably Deolindo Bittel whose three terms as governor in the 1960s and 1970s were each cut short by military intervention. Bitell subsequently ran for vice-president in the 1983 Argentine Presidential elections and later served as mayor of the provincial capital, Resistencia.

Infrastructure

With few paved highways, and thus an overdependence on passenger rail services, Chaco was adversely impacted by the national rail privatizations and line closures of the early 1990s. In 1997, the services that had been previously run by the state-owned company Ferrocarriles Argentinos since railway nationalization in 1948, were taken over by the Servicios Ferroviarios del Chaco S.A. (SEFECHA) (Chaco Railway Services), making SEFECHA, at the time, the only publicly owned commuter rail service in Argentina. SEFECHA currently carries nearly a million passengers a year and has contributed to the province's vigorous recovery from the 2002 crisis.[13]

Poverty

Chaco Province continues to suffer from the worst social indicators in the country with 49.3% of its population living below the poverty line by income and with 17.5% of children between the ages of two and five in a state of malnutrition in 2009.[14] Among Argentine provinces, it ranks last by GDP per capita and 21st by Human Development Index, only above its neighbors Formosa and Santiago del Estero.

Official languages

In 2010, Chaco became the second province in Argentina to declare indigenous languages official within the province, after Corrientes.[15] Three local languages gained official status in Chaco besides Spanish: Kom, Moqoit, and Wichí.[16]

Economy

Chaco's economy, like most in the region, is relatively underdeveloped, yet has recovered vigorously since 2002. It was estimated to be US$4.397 billion in 2006, or US$4,467 per capita (half the national average and the third-lowest in Argentina).[17] Chaco's economy is diversified, but its agricultural sector has suffered from recurrent droughts over the past decade.

 
Tannin factory in Puerto Tirol.

Agricultural development in Chaco is predominantly associated with the commercial growing of quebracho wood and cotton. Chaco currently produces 60% of Argentina's national cotton production. Agricultural food production accounts for 17% of Argentina's output. This includes crops such as soy, sorghum, and maize. Sugarcane is also cultivated in the south, as well as rice and tobacco to a lesser degree.

Cattle breeds consisting of crosses with zebu are regarded as better adapted to the high temperatures, grass shortage and occasional flooding than intensively reared pure-breeds.

Industrial contributes approximately 10% to the provincial economy and includes textiles produced from local cotton, oil and coal production, and sugar, alcohol and paper, all derived from sugar cane.

Chaco is home to the Chaco National Park, but tourism is not a well-developed industry in the province. The province's main airport, Resistencia International Airport, serves around 100,000 passengers annually.

Government

The provincial government is divided into the usual three branches: the executive, headed by a popularly elected governor, who appoint the cabinet; the legislative; and the judiciary, headed by the Supreme Court and completed by several inferior tribunals.

The Constitution of Chaco Province forms the formal law of the province.

In Argentina, the most important law enforcement organization is the Argentine Federal Police but the additional work is carried out by the Chaco Provincial Police.

Political organization

The province is divided into 25 departments (Spanish: departamentos).

Department Seat Area
(km2)
Population
(2010)[18]
Population
(2001)[18]
Density
(2010)
Almirante Brown Pampa del Infierno 17,276 34,075 29,086 1.97
Bermejo La Leonesa 2,562 25,052 24,215 9.77
Chacabuco Charata 1,378 30,590 27,813 22.19
Comandante Fernández Presidencia Roque Sáenz Peña 1,500 96,944 88,164 64.63
12 de Octubre General Pinedo 2,576 22,281 20,149 8.65
2 de Abril Hermoso Campo 1,594 7,432 7,435 4.66
Fray Justo Santa María de Oro Santa Sylvina 2,205 11,826 10,485 5.36
General Belgrano Corzuela 1,218 11,988 10,470 9.84
General Donovan Makallé 1,487 13,490 13,385 9.07
General Güemes Juan José Castelli 25,487 67,132 62,227 2.63
Independencia Campo Largo 1,871 22,411 20,620 11.98
Libertad Puerto Tirol 1,088 12,158 10,822 11.17
Libertador General San Martín General José de San Martín 7,800 59,147 54,470 7.58
Maipú Tres Isletas 2,855 25,288 24,747 8.85
Mayor Luis J. Fontana Villa Ángela 3,708 55,080 53,550 14.85
9 de Julio Las Breñas 2,097 28,555 26,955 13.61
O'Higgins San Bernardo 1,580 20,131 19,231 12.74
Presidencia de la Plaza Presidencia de la Plaza 2,284 12,499 12,231 5.47
Primero de Mayo Margarita Belén 1,864 10,322 9,131 5.53
Quitilipi Quitilipi 1,545 34,081 32,083 22.05
San Fernando Resistencia 3,489 390,874 365,637 112.03
San Lorenzo Villa Berthet 2,135 14,702 14,252 6.88
Sargento Cabral Colonia Elisa 1,651 15,899 15,030 9.63
Tapenagá Charadai 6,025 4,097 4,188 0.68
25 de Mayo Machagai 2,358 29,215 28,070 12.39

Villages

See also

References

  1. ^ "Nuevos datos provisorios del Censo 2022: Argentina tiene 46.044.703 habitantes". Infobae. 31 January 2023. Retrieved 2023-02-03.
  2. ^ (PDF) (in Spanish). United Nations Development Programme. p. 155. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 August 2017. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
  3. ^ "Lengua Wichi (Mataco). Diccionario Mataco - Español". pueblosoriginarios.com. Retrieved Oct 4, 2020.
  4. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Chaco" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 786.
  5. ^ . Fundación para el Desarrollo Sustentable del Chaco. Archived from the original on 3 September 2009. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
  6. ^ Lozano, Pedro (1989). Descripción corográfica del Gran Chaco Gualamba. San Miguel de Tucumán: Universidad Nacional de Tucumán. p. 486.
  7. ^ a b Edelmiro Porcel. . Periodico Domine. Archived from the original on 24 November 2011. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
  8. ^ . 23 Cumbres. Archived from the original on 24 September 2009. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  9. ^ a b c (PDF) (in Spanish). Universidad Nacional del Nordeste. 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 November 2016. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  10. ^ (PDF) (in Spanish). Administración Nacional de Laboratorios e Institutos de Salud. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 November 2016. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m (in Spanish). Secretaria de Mineria de la Nacion (Argentina). Archived from the original on 13 September 2004. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  12. ^ "Four arrested in Argentina smuggling more than ton of meteorites". news.yahoo.com. Retrieved Oct 4, 2020.
  13. ^ "Argentinien - Friends of Latin American Railways". www.ferrolatino.ch. Retrieved Oct 4, 2020.
  14. ^ "Capitanich admitió que Chaco tiene los peores indicadores sociales de la Argentina pero culpó a la Nación". infobae.com. 26 July 2009. Archived from the original on January 27, 2013. Retrieved 6 April 2012.
  15. ^ Ley No. 5598 de la Provincia de Corrientes, 22 de octubre de 2004
  16. ^ Ley No. 6604 de la Provincia de Chaco, 28 de julio de 2010, B.O., (9092), Link 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ "El déficit consolidado de las provincias rondará los $11.500 millones este año" (in Spanish). Instituto Argentino para el Desarrollo de las Economías Regionales. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  18. ^ a b "Cuadro P1-P. Provincia del Chaco. Población total y variación intercensal absoluta y relativa por departamento" (PDF). INDEC. 2010. Retrieved 16 April 2012.[permanent dead link]

External links

  •   Media related to Chaco Province at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website (Spanish)
  • Pictures of Chaco 2010-12-10 at the Wayback Machine

Coordinates: 27°27′05″S 58°59′12″W / 27.45139°S 58.98667°W / -27.45139; -58.98667

chaco, province, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Chaco Province news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Chaco Spanish pronunciation ˈtʃako Wichi To kos wet 3 officially the Province of Chaco Spanish provincia del Chaco pɾoˈbinsja del ˈtʃako is one of the 23 provinces in Argentina Its capital and largest city is Resistencia 4 It is located in the north east of the country Chaco Provincia del ChacoProvinceProvince of ChacoPalm trees in Resistencia CityFlagCoat of armsLocation of Chaco within ArgentinaCountry ArgentinaOfficial LanguagesSpanish Kom Moqoit and WichiCapital and largest cityResistenciaGovernment GovernorJorge Capitanich PJ Vice GovernorAnalia Rach Quiroga PJ Legislature32 National Deputies7 National SenatorsInes Pilatti Vergara FDT Antonio Jose Rodas FDT Victor Zimmermann JXC AreaRanked 12th Total99 633 km2 38 469 sq mi Population 2022 census 1 Total1 142 963 Rank11th Density11 km2 30 sq mi Demonym s Chacoan chaquenoTime zoneUTC 3 ART ISO 3166 codeAR HHDI 2019 0 820 Very High 24th 2 Websitewww wbr chaco wbr gov wbr arIt is bordered by Salta and Santiago del Estero to the west Formosa to the north Corrientes to the east and Santa Fe to the south 4 It also has an international border with the Paraguayan Department of Neembucu With an area of 99 633 km2 38 469 sq mi and a population of 1 142 963 as of 2022 it is the twelfth most extensive and the eleventh most populated of the twenty three Argentine provinces In 2010 Chaco became the second province in Argentina to adopt more than one official language These languages are the Kom Moqoit and Wichi languages spoken by the Toba Mocovi and Wichi peoples respectively Chaco has historically been among Argentina s poorest regions and currently ranks last both by per capita GDP and on the Human Development Index Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 2 2 Precipitation 2 3 Temperature 2 4 Humidity 3 History 4 20th century 4 1 Political structure 4 2 Infrastructure 4 3 Poverty 4 4 Official languages 5 Economy 6 Government 7 Political organization 8 Villages 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEtymology EditChaco derives from chaku the Quechua word used to name a hunting territory or the hunting technique used by the people of the Inca Empire Annually large groups of up to thirty thousand hunters would enter the territory forming columns and circling their prey 5 Jesuit missioner Pedro Lozano wrote in his book Chorographic Description of the Great Chaco Gualamba published in Cordoba Spain in 1733 Its etymology indicates the multitude of nations that inhabit that region When they go hunting the Indians gather from many parts the vicunas and guanacos that crowd is called chacu in the Quechua language which is common in Peru and that Spaniards have corrupted into Chaco 6 However the earliest known mention of the term in a document was in a letter written to Fernando Torres de Portugal y Mesia Viceroy of Peru dated in 1589 by the then Governor of Tucuman Juan Ramirez de Velasco who referred to the region as Chaco Gualamba 7 The term Gualamba is of uncertain origin and has since fallen into disuse 7 Geography Edit Dock on a southeastern wetland close to Parana River The province of Chaco lies within the southern part of the Gran Chaco region a vast lowland plain that covers territories in Argentina Paraguay and Bolivia Chaco Province covers an area of 99 633 km2 38 469 sq mi and ranks as the twelfth largest Argentinian province The highest ground in the province is also the most western near the municipality of Taco Pozo at an elevation of 272 m 892 ft above sea level 8 The Parana and Paraguay rivers separate Chaco province from Corrientes Province and the Republic of Paraguay To the north the river Bermejo forms another natural border dividing Chaco Province from Formosa Province In the south the border follows the 28th parallel south separating the region from Santa Fe Province while in the west it borders Salta and Santiago del Estero Other important rivers include the Negro Tapenaga Palometa and Salado all tributaries or anabranches of the river Parana Climate Edit See also Climate of Argentina and Climatic regions of Argentina Koppen climate map of Chaco Argentina The province has a subtropical climate 9 It is divided in two different climate zones a more humid one in the east and a drier subtropical climate in the center and west 10 The eastern parts of the province have a humid subtropical climate Cfa under the Koppen climate classification with no dry season 11 In the west where precipitation is lower it has a subtropical climate with a dry winter and is classified as a semi arid climate BS under the Koppen climate classification due to potential evapotranspiration exceeding precipitation 11 Precipitation Edit In the most humid eastern parts of the province precipitation falls throughout the year with no dry season 11 These areas receive around 1 400 millimetres 55 in of precipitation per year 11 Precipitation decreases westwards and become more concentrated in the summer months 9 11 Temperature Edit Mean annual temperatures range between 21 to 23 C 70 to 73 F which decreases from north to south 11 Summers are hot with temperatures that can reach up to 38 to 41 C 100 to 106 F in the eastern parts of the province 11 The western parts experience more variation in temperatures due continental influences 9 extreme temperatures in summer are more extreme with temperatures that frequently exceed 40 C 104 F 11 During winters incursions of cold polar air from the south can lead to frosts and temperatures that fall below freezing 11 Being under an area of high solar radiation during summer a consequence is that a low pressure system forms over the province during summer 11 Humidity Edit Humidity in the province is high due to its climate particularly in the north the wettest portion of the province 11 Most of the winds that transport humid air come from the north and east 11 Winters are the most humid seasons high humidity due to this season being characterized by frequent fogs 11 History Edit La Sabana and its new railway station in 1899 Territorial Governor s House The area was originally inhabited by various hunter gatherers speaking languages from the Mataco Guaicru family Native tribes including the Toba and Wichi survive in the region and have important communities in this province as well as in Formosa Province In 1576 the governor of a province in Northern Argentina commissioned the military to search for a huge mass of iron which he had heard that natives used for their weapons The natives called the area Heavenly Fields which was translated into Spanish as Campo del Cielo This area is now a protected region situated on the border between the provinces of Chaco and Santiago del Estero where a group of iron meteorites fell in a Holocene impact event some four to five thousand years ago In 2015 Police arrested four alleged smugglers trying to steal over a ton of legally protected meteoric iron 12 The first European settlement was founded by Spanish conquistador Alonso de Vera y Aragon in 1585 and was called Concepcion de Nuestra Senora It was abandoned in 1632 During its existence it was one of the most important cities in the region but attacks from local Indians forced the residents to leave In the 17th century the San Fernando del Rio Negro Jesuit mission was founded in the area of the modern day city of Resistencia but it was abandoned fifteen years later The Gran Chaco region remained largely unexplored and uninhabited by either Europeans or Argentines until the late 19th century after numerous confrontations between Argentina and Paraguay during the War of the Triple Alliance San Fernando was re established as a military outpost and was renamed Resistencia in 1876 The Territorio Nacional del Gran Chaco was established in 1872 This territory which included the current Formosa Province and lands presently inside Paraguay was superseded by Territorio Nacional del Chaco upon its administrative division in 1884 20th century Edit The Provincial Government House Designed in 1955 political disputes delayed its completion until 1972 Between the end of the nineteenth and the first decades of the twentieth centuries the province received a variety of immigrants among them Volga Germans and Mennonites from Russia Germany and Canada They alongside other immigrants transformed Chaco into a productive farming region known for its dairy and beef production Political structure Edit In 1951 the territory became a province and its name was changed to Provincia Presidente Peron The province was renamed again in 1955 when the government of President Juan Peron was overthrown returning to the historical name of Chaco Chaco voters however continued to support Peronist candidates in subsequent elections notably Deolindo Bittel whose three terms as governor in the 1960s and 1970s were each cut short by military intervention Bitell subsequently ran for vice president in the 1983 Argentine Presidential elections and later served as mayor of the provincial capital Resistencia Infrastructure Edit With few paved highways and thus an overdependence on passenger rail services Chaco was adversely impacted by the national rail privatizations and line closures of the early 1990s In 1997 the services that had been previously run by the state owned company Ferrocarriles Argentinos since railway nationalization in 1948 were taken over by the Servicios Ferroviarios del Chaco S A SEFECHA Chaco Railway Services making SEFECHA at the time the only publicly owned commuter rail service in Argentina SEFECHA currently carries nearly a million passengers a year and has contributed to the province s vigorous recovery from the 2002 crisis 13 Poverty Edit Chaco Province continues to suffer from the worst social indicators in the country with 49 3 of its population living below the poverty line by income and with 17 5 of children between the ages of two and five in a state of malnutrition in 2009 14 Among Argentine provinces it ranks last by GDP per capita and 21st by Human Development Index only above its neighbors Formosa and Santiago del Estero Official languages Edit In 2010 Chaco became the second province in Argentina to declare indigenous languages official within the province after Corrientes 15 Three local languages gained official status in Chaco besides Spanish Kom Moqoit and Wichi 16 Economy EditChaco s economy like most in the region is relatively underdeveloped yet has recovered vigorously since 2002 It was estimated to be US 4 397 billion in 2006 or US 4 467 per capita half the national average and the third lowest in Argentina 17 Chaco s economy is diversified but its agricultural sector has suffered from recurrent droughts over the past decade Tannin factory in Puerto Tirol Agricultural development in Chaco is predominantly associated with the commercial growing of quebracho wood and cotton Chaco currently produces 60 of Argentina s national cotton production Agricultural food production accounts for 17 of Argentina s output This includes crops such as soy sorghum and maize Sugarcane is also cultivated in the south as well as rice and tobacco to a lesser degree Cattle breeds consisting of crosses with zebu are regarded as better adapted to the high temperatures grass shortage and occasional flooding than intensively reared pure breeds Industrial contributes approximately 10 to the provincial economy and includes textiles produced from local cotton oil and coal production and sugar alcohol and paper all derived from sugar cane Chaco is home to the Chaco National Park but tourism is not a well developed industry in the province The province s main airport Resistencia International Airport serves around 100 000 passengers annually Government EditThe provincial government is divided into the usual three branches the executive headed by a popularly elected governor who appoint the cabinet the legislative and the judiciary headed by the Supreme Court and completed by several inferior tribunals Main articles Chamber of Deputies of Chaco and Governor of Chaco Province The Constitution of Chaco Province forms the formal law of the province In Argentina the most important law enforcement organization is the Argentine Federal Police but the additional work is carried out by the Chaco Provincial Police Political organization EditThe province is divided into 25 departments Spanish departamentos Department Seat Area km2 Population 2010 18 Population 2001 18 Density 2010 Almirante Brown Pampa del Infierno 17 276 34 075 29 086 1 97Bermejo La Leonesa 2 562 25 052 24 215 9 77Chacabuco Charata 1 378 30 590 27 813 22 19Comandante Fernandez Presidencia Roque Saenz Pena 1 500 96 944 88 164 64 6312 de Octubre General Pinedo 2 576 22 281 20 149 8 652 de Abril Hermoso Campo 1 594 7 432 7 435 4 66Fray Justo Santa Maria de Oro Santa Sylvina 2 205 11 826 10 485 5 36General Belgrano Corzuela 1 218 11 988 10 470 9 84General Donovan Makalle 1 487 13 490 13 385 9 07General Guemes Juan Jose Castelli 25 487 67 132 62 227 2 63Independencia Campo Largo 1 871 22 411 20 620 11 98Libertad Puerto Tirol 1 088 12 158 10 822 11 17Libertador General San Martin General Jose de San Martin 7 800 59 147 54 470 7 58Maipu Tres Isletas 2 855 25 288 24 747 8 85Mayor Luis J Fontana Villa Angela 3 708 55 080 53 550 14 859 de Julio Las Brenas 2 097 28 555 26 955 13 61O Higgins San Bernardo 1 580 20 131 19 231 12 74Presidencia de la Plaza Presidencia de la Plaza 2 284 12 499 12 231 5 47Primero de Mayo Margarita Belen 1 864 10 322 9 131 5 53Quitilipi Quitilipi 1 545 34 081 32 083 22 05San Fernando Resistencia 3 489 390 874 365 637 112 03San Lorenzo Villa Berthet 2 135 14 702 14 252 6 88Sargento Cabral Colonia Elisa 1 651 15 899 15 030 9 63Tapenaga Charadai 6 025 4 097 4 188 0 6825 de Mayo Machagai 2 358 29 215 28 070 12 39Villages EditAvia Terai Colonia Aborigen El Pastoril Colonia Baranda Colonias Unidas Comandancia Frias Cote Lai El Espinillo El Sauzal El Sauzalito El Tacuruzal Fortin Las Chunas Fuerte Esperanza General Vedia Haumonia La Chiquita La Escondida La Leonesa La Liguria Las Garcitas Meson de Fierro Napenay Pampa Landriel Pampa Mangrullo Paraje San Fernando Pueblo Clodomiro Diaz Puerto Bastiani Puerto Eva Peron Chaco Puerto LavalleSee also EditCampo del Cielo Napalpi massacreReferences Edit Nuevos datos provisorios del Censo 2022 Argentina tiene 46 044 703 habitantes Infobae 31 January 2023 Retrieved 2023 02 03 Informacion para el desarrollo sostenible Argentina y la Agenda 2030 PDF in Spanish United Nations Development Programme p 155 Archived from the original PDF on 25 August 2017 Retrieved 25 August 2017 Lengua Wichi Mataco Diccionario Mataco Espanol pueblosoriginarios com Retrieved Oct 4 2020 a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Chaco Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 786 Chaco Fundacion para el Desarrollo Sustentable del Chaco Archived from the original on 3 September 2009 Retrieved 7 April 2012 Lozano Pedro 1989 Descripcion corografica del Gran Chaco Gualamba San Miguel de Tucuman Universidad Nacional de Tucuman p 486 a b Edelmiro Porcel Chaco Gualamba Periodico Domine Archived from the original on 24 November 2011 Retrieved 7 April 2012 23 Cumbres Chaco 23 Cumbres Archived from the original on 24 September 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2012 a b c El cultivo del algodon en la cuenca media del Tapenaga Fechas de siembra rendimiento y precipitaciones PDF in Spanish Universidad Nacional del Nordeste 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 3 November 2016 Retrieved 2 November 2016 Provincia de Chaco PDF in Spanish Administracion Nacional de Laboratorios e Institutos de Salud Archived from the original PDF on 3 November 2016 Retrieved 2 November 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Provincia de Chaco Clima y Meteorologia in Spanish Secretaria de Mineria de la Nacion Argentina Archived from the original on 13 September 2004 Retrieved 2 November 2016 Four arrested in Argentina smuggling more than ton of meteorites news yahoo com Retrieved Oct 4 2020 Argentinien Friends of Latin American Railways www ferrolatino ch Retrieved Oct 4 2020 Capitanich admitio que Chaco tiene los peores indicadores sociales de la Argentina pero culpo a la Nacion infobae com 26 July 2009 Archived from the original on January 27 2013 Retrieved 6 April 2012 Ley No 5598 de la Provincia de Corrientes 22 de octubre de 2004 Ley No 6604 de la Provincia de Chaco 28 de julio de 2010 B O 9092 Link Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine El deficit consolidado de las provincias rondara los 11 500 millones este ano in Spanish Instituto Argentino para el Desarrollo de las Economias Regionales Retrieved 10 July 2015 a b Cuadro P1 P Provincia del Chaco Poblacion total y variacion intercensal absoluta y relativa por departamento PDF INDEC 2010 Retrieved 16 April 2012 permanent dead link External links Edit Media related to Chaco Province at Wikimedia Commons Official website Spanish Pictures of Chaco Archived 2010 12 10 at the Wayback Machine Coordinates 27 27 05 S 58 59 12 W 27 45139 S 58 98667 W 27 45139 58 98667 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chaco Province amp oldid 1137183663, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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