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Magdalena Department

Magdalena (Spanish pronunciation: [maɣðaˈlena]) is a department of Colombia with more than 1.3 million people, located to the north of the country by the Caribbean Sea. The capital of the Magdalena Department is Santa Marta and was named after the Magdalena River. It inherited the name of one of the original nine states of the United States of Colombia that its current territory integrated.

Department of Magdalena
Departamento del Magdalena
Motto(s): 
Liderazgo, Seguridad y Transparencia
(Spanish: Leadership, Security and Transparency)
Anthem: Himno del Magdalena
Magdalena shown in red
Topography of the department
Coordinates: 11°14′31″N 74°12′19″W / 11.24194°N 74.20528°W / 11.24194; -74.20528Coordinates: 11°14′31″N 74°12′19″W / 11.24194°N 74.20528°W / 11.24194; -74.20528
Country Colombia
RegionCaribbean Region
Established25 July 1824
CapitalSanta Marta
Government
 • GovernorCarlos Caceido
 • LegislatureAssembly of Magdalena
Area
 • Total23,188 km2 (8,953 sq mi)
 • Rank21st
Population
 (2018)[3]
 • Total1,341,746
 • Rank14th
 • Density58/km2 (150/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC-05
ISO 3166 codeCO-MAG
Municipalities31
HDI (2019)0.726[4]
high · 22nd of 33
Website

Geography

 
Magdalena Department seen from space.
Historical population
YearPop.±%
1973 540,258—    
1985 890,934+64.9%
1993 1,127,631+26.6%
2005 1,149,917+2.0%
2018 1,341,746+16.7%
Source:[5]

Location

The Department of Magdalena is located on the North Coast of the Colombian Caribbean Region.

On the north it borders the Caribbean Sea. On the northeast it borders the La Guajira Department, being divided by the Palomino River. On the east it borders with the Cesar Department, which is in part divided by the Guaraní River.

On the west, it is divided by the Magdalena River, and it borders the departments of Atlantico in the Northwest, and Bolívar in the West and Southwest.

Hydrology

Basins

The territory of the Department of Magdalena is formed by four drainage basins which are very different in composition and importance.

Sierra Nevada's Northern Slope

The drainage basin of the Sierra Nevada's western slope is located in the northern part of the department. The Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta creates different rivers that run mainly through the municipality of Santa Marta, and that finally end up draining into the Caribbean Sea.

The rivers that form part of this basin are:

  • Palomino River
  • Don Diego River 2
  • Buritaca River
  • Guachaca River
  • Mendiguaca River
  • Piedras River
  • Manzanares River
  • Gaira River
Sierra Nevada’s Southwestern Slope

This basin gathers its waters from the rivers coming from the southern and western slopes of the Sierra Nevada. The basin irrigates great extensions of the municipalities of Ciénaga, Zona Bananera, Fundación, Aracataca, and El Retén, which are the heart of the agricultural and livestock economy of the department. The rivers that form part of this basin are:

  • Frío River
  • Sevilla River
  • Tucurinca River
  • Aracataca River
  • Fundación River
  • Rosa Creek

It also consists of a small number of arroyos that only flow during the rainy seasons.

This basin also encompasses the Ciénaga Grande de Santa Marta, the largest marsh in the north of the country, which is formed by 16 smaller marshes that are connected by means of arms within the march. The balance of the march is a delicate one that depends on the fresh waters coming from the Sierra Nevada, and the periodical flooding of the Magdalena River, and the salt water coming from the mouth of the March to the sea, that is carried by the current and winds into the marshland.

Magdalena Basin
 
View of the municipality of El Banco from the Magdalena River

The Magdalena River Basin is the largest drainage basin in the department, it is formed by the Magdalena River and its tributaries that feed on to the river and the Marsh.

 
Overflow of the Magdalena River caused floodings in 2005.

The Mompóx Depression is found within this basin, this depression runs from the Zapatosa Marsh to the delta of the Magdalena River. This depression collects the most water in the department as its where the Cauca River, Cesar River, and the San Jorge River drain its waters. The Magdalena River is by far the most affluent river of these, and during the rainy season when it overflows, it causes the other rivers to flow backwards, not before overflowing the marshes and sometimes flooding some valleys.

Ariguaní Basin

The Ariguaní River drains into the Magdalena River through the Zapatosa Marsh and washes over the central valleys of the departments of Magdalena and Cesar that are the principal areas of agriculture and animal husbandry in the Caribbean Region.

Marshes

The department of Magdalena is characterized by its many marshes and extensive marshland valleys. The whole western side of the department its dotted with marshes and lakes due to the Magdalena River that borders the department on this side. Most of this marshes are located in the northwestern side. The permanent marshes are, Chilloa, La Rinconada, Tesca, Pijiño, Juan Criollo, Jaraba, Playa Afuera, Ciénaga Grande de Santa Marta, and Zapatosa.

The Ciénaga Grande de Santa Marta, is the biggest and by far the most important marsh in the department of Magdalena and one of the most important marshes in the country. It is located in the northwest of the department and is separated from the sea by a very thin margin of land, only a few meters away. It has an extension of 4,280 km², of which 730 km² are just water mirrors with a depth of 2 to 6 meters.

The Zapatosa Marsh, located in the municipality of El Plato in the southernmost part of the department, it is shared with the Cesar Department, who controls most of its waters. It has an extension of 310 km² and at its deepest it reaches about 8m. In it many rivers of different importance merge. The Zapatosa Marsh drains into the Magdalena River by an arm of about 16 km of length.

Climate

The Department of Magdalena, because of its terrain, and proximity to the sea has an unstable weather. Its Climate is mainly dictated by its global positioning, and because the department of Magdalena is located on the Intertropical Convergence Zone it possess an inter-tropical climate. Temperature in the department is affected by ocean currents, precipitation and atmospheric pressure, it mainly has a hot temperatures with high humidity, but temperatures vary as altitude raises.

The altitude of the department goes from 0m to 5,775m above sea levels, the drastic changes of altitude divide the territory into what is called thermal floors. There are no solid or determined divides between these floors as local factors can affect the temperature. The first 200m of altitude are considered the warm lands, they occupy a great extension of the departmental territory, the average temperature is of 30 °C. The main urban centers are located in the warm lands, including all of the downtown urban area of Santa Marta. The altitude increase because of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, an isolated mountain, the highest at sea level, and temperatures raise as it goes up.

Winds

 
Illustration of the Föhn effect

The presence of the Sierra Nevada in this area of the country has consequences in the climate of the department, the SNSM stands windward blocking the path of the Trade winds that blow from the North and Northeast creating a greater cloud accumulation and precipitation. The winds that crash into the mountain ascend in an Orographic lift, this cooler air cannot hold the moisture as well as warm air and this effectively raises the relative humidity, creating clouds and frequently precipitation. The clouds that manage to pass over the mountain, move hastily downwards creating foehn winds that raise the temperature of the area west of the Sierra, which include the Santa Marta, and Ciénaga.

In the coastal area, droughts are cause by the diversion of the cold and warm katabatic winds coming down the Sierra, however the sea breezes help to cool down temperatures a bit, but by because of their direction, they end up extending the drought effects farther inland.

Rainfall

The department of Magdalena due to its location in the Intertropical Convergence Zone has only two seasons. The Rainy season takes place between April and November, with a period of less intensity between June and August. The dry season takes place during December and March.

The Mompox Depression presents its own climatic conditions due to its many permanent bodies of water, like the different ciénagas or mashes, and rivers and lakes. This wet habitat, permanently exposed to solar radiation, makes for a very humid environment, with an average annual rainfall of between 1,500 and 2,000mm, these rains are Convection rains as they are created by evaporation of its waters by high temperatures, this is typical precipitation around the equatorial belt.

Due to its complicated geography, the precipitation in the department ranges from 250mm in the driest areas, to 4,000mm in the cold floors of the Sierra Nevada.

Environment

 
Kids playing in the beach in Santa Marta
 
Taganga

The territory of Magdalena has an area of approximately 23,188 km², small compared to other regions, but in its territory various types of different ecoregions are found. From the beaches and sea landscape in the North, the snow-covered peaks in the Sierra, the swampy marshes in the west, the cloud forests, to the grasslands inland, the urban districts, the farmlands, the dry desert like, the deep rain forest, the rocky rivers to many other small ecosystems. These ecosystem support different fauna and flora and house many delicate species.

Ecoregions

According to the World Wide Fund for Nature, in the Magdalena Department 8 different distinct ecoregions are found in its territory.

Politics

Administrative divisions

The Department of Magdalena is subdivided into 30 municipalities and one district. The municipalities are governed by a democratically elected municipal mayor and a municipal council. The Touristic, Cultural and Historic District of Santa Marta is administered by the Municipality of Santa Marta and has special distinction within the country.

Municipalities

Tourism

Sports

  • Unión Magdalena Football Team that until c. 2005 that did not make the cut and was sent to the Colombian second division (Primera B). The team is nicknamed "el ciclón bananero" (The Banana Cyclone).

References

  1. ^ "Nuestro departamento: Información general: Geografía". Gobernación del Magdalena. Archived from the original on 29 June 2012.
  2. ^ Kline, Harvey F. (2012). "Magdalena, Department of". Historical Dictionary of Colombia. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. p. 304. ISBN 978-0-8108-7813-6.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 November 2009. Retrieved 13 February 2013.
  4. ^ "Sub-national HDI - Area Database - Global Data Lab". hdi.globaldatalab.org. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  5. ^ . DANE. Departamento Administrativo Nacional de Estadísitica. Archived from the original on 16 January 2018. Retrieved 6 July 2017.

External links

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For other uses see Magdalena disambiguation 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 Magdalena Department news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish September 2012 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Spanish article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 5 221 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es Magdalena Colombia see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated es Magdalena Colombia to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Magdalena Spanish pronunciation maɣdaˈlena is a department of Colombia with more than 1 3 million people located to the north of the country by the Caribbean Sea The capital of the Magdalena Department is Santa Marta and was named after the Magdalena River It inherited the name of one of the original nine states of the United States of Colombia that its current territory integrated Department of Magdalena Departamento del MagdalenaDepartmentFlagCoat of armsMotto s Liderazgo Seguridad y Transparencia Spanish Leadership Security and Transparency Anthem Himno del MagdalenaMagdalena shown in redTopography of the departmentCoordinates 11 14 31 N 74 12 19 W 11 24194 N 74 20528 W 11 24194 74 20528 Coordinates 11 14 31 N 74 12 19 W 11 24194 N 74 20528 W 11 24194 74 20528Country ColombiaRegionCaribbean RegionEstablished25 July 1824CapitalSanta MartaGovernment GovernorCarlos Caceido LegislatureAssembly of MagdalenaArea 1 2 Total23 188 km2 8 953 sq mi Rank21stPopulation 2018 3 Total1 341 746 Rank14th Density58 km2 150 sq mi Time zoneUTC 05ISO 3166 codeCO MAGMunicipalities31HDI 2019 0 726 4 high 22nd of 33Websitewww gobmagdalena gov co Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Location 1 2 Hydrology 1 2 1 Basins 1 3 Climate 1 4 Winds 1 5 Rainfall 1 6 Environment 1 6 1 Ecoregions 2 Politics 2 1 Administrative divisions 2 1 1 Municipalities 3 Tourism 4 Sports 5 References 6 External linksGeography Edit Magdalena Department seen from space Historical populationYearPop 1973540 258 1985890 934 64 9 19931 127 631 26 6 20051 149 917 2 0 20181 341 746 16 7 Source 5 Location Edit See also List of Caribbean islands Magdalena Department The Department of Magdalena is located on the North Coast of the Colombian Caribbean Region On the north it borders the Caribbean Sea On the northeast it borders the La Guajira Department being divided by the Palomino River On the east it borders with the Cesar Department which is in part divided by the Guarani River On the west it is divided by the Magdalena River and it borders the departments of Atlantico in the Northwest and Bolivar in the West and Southwest Hydrology Edit Basins Edit The territory of the Department of Magdalena is formed by four drainage basins which are very different in composition and importance Sierra Nevada s Northern SlopeThe drainage basin of the Sierra Nevada s western slope is located in the northern part of the department The Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta creates different rivers that run mainly through the municipality of Santa Marta and that finally end up draining into the Caribbean Sea The rivers that form part of this basin are Palomino River Don Diego River 2 Buritaca River Guachaca River Mendiguaca River Piedras River Manzanares River Gaira RiverSierra Nevada s Southwestern SlopeThis basin gathers its waters from the rivers coming from the southern and western slopes of the Sierra Nevada The basin irrigates great extensions of the municipalities of Cienaga Zona Bananera Fundacion Aracataca and El Reten which are the heart of the agricultural and livestock economy of the department The rivers that form part of this basin are Frio River Sevilla River Tucurinca River Aracataca River Fundacion River Rosa CreekIt also consists of a small number of arroyos that only flow during the rainy seasons This basin also encompasses the Cienaga Grande de Santa Marta the largest marsh in the north of the country which is formed by 16 smaller marshes that are connected by means of arms within the march The balance of the march is a delicate one that depends on the fresh waters coming from the Sierra Nevada and the periodical flooding of the Magdalena River and the salt water coming from the mouth of the March to the sea that is carried by the current and winds into the marshland Magdalena Basin View of the municipality of El Banco from the Magdalena River The Magdalena River Basin is the largest drainage basin in the department it is formed by the Magdalena River and its tributaries that feed on to the river and the Marsh Overflow of the Magdalena River caused floodings in 2005 The Mompox Depression is found within this basin this depression runs from the Zapatosa Marsh to the delta of the Magdalena River This depression collects the most water in the department as its where the Cauca River Cesar River and the San Jorge River drain its waters The Magdalena River is by far the most affluent river of these and during the rainy season when it overflows it causes the other rivers to flow backwards not before overflowing the marshes and sometimes flooding some valleys Ariguani BasinThe Ariguani River drains into the Magdalena River through the Zapatosa Marsh and washes over the central valleys of the departments of Magdalena and Cesar that are the principal areas of agriculture and animal husbandry in the Caribbean Region MarshesThe department of Magdalena is characterized by its many marshes and extensive marshland valleys The whole western side of the department its dotted with marshes and lakes due to the Magdalena River that borders the department on this side Most of this marshes are located in the northwestern side The permanent marshes are Chilloa La Rinconada Tesca Pijino Juan Criollo Jaraba Playa Afuera Cienaga Grande de Santa Marta and Zapatosa Cienaga Grande de Santa Marta Main article Cienaga Grande de Santa Marta The Cienaga Grande de Santa Marta is the biggest and by far the most important marsh in the department of Magdalena and one of the most important marshes in the country It is located in the northwest of the department and is separated from the sea by a very thin margin of land only a few meters away It has an extension of 4 280 km of which 730 km are just water mirrors with a depth of 2 to 6 meters The Zapatosa Marsh located in the municipality of El Plato in the southernmost part of the department it is shared with the Cesar Department who controls most of its waters It has an extension of 310 km and at its deepest it reaches about 8m In it many rivers of different importance merge The Zapatosa Marsh drains into the Magdalena River by an arm of about 16 km of length Climate Edit The Department of Magdalena because of its terrain and proximity to the sea has an unstable weather Its Climate is mainly dictated by its global positioning and because the department of Magdalena is located on the Intertropical Convergence Zone it possess an inter tropical climate Temperature in the department is affected by ocean currents precipitation and atmospheric pressure it mainly has a hot temperatures with high humidity but temperatures vary as altitude raises The altitude of the department goes from 0m to 5 775m above sea levels the drastic changes of altitude divide the territory into what is called thermal floors There are no solid or determined divides between these floors as local factors can affect the temperature The first 200m of altitude are considered the warm lands they occupy a great extension of the departmental territory the average temperature is of 30 C The main urban centers are located in the warm lands including all of the downtown urban area of Santa Marta The altitude increase because of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta an isolated mountain the highest at sea level and temperatures raise as it goes up Winds Edit Illustration of the Fohn effect The presence of the Sierra Nevada in this area of the country has consequences in the climate of the department the SNSM stands windward blocking the path of the Trade winds that blow from the North and Northeast creating a greater cloud accumulation and precipitation The winds that crash into the mountain ascend in an Orographic lift this cooler air cannot hold the moisture as well as warm air and this effectively raises the relative humidity creating clouds and frequently precipitation The clouds that manage to pass over the mountain move hastily downwards creating foehn winds that raise the temperature of the area west of the Sierra which include the Santa Marta and Cienaga In the coastal area droughts are cause by the diversion of the cold and warm katabatic winds coming down the Sierra however the sea breezes help to cool down temperatures a bit but by because of their direction they end up extending the drought effects farther inland Rainfall Edit The department of Magdalena due to its location in the Intertropical Convergence Zone has only two seasons The Rainy season takes place between April and November with a period of less intensity between June and August The dry season takes place during December and March The Mompox Depression presents its own climatic conditions due to its many permanent bodies of water like the different cienagas or mashes and rivers and lakes This wet habitat permanently exposed to solar radiation makes for a very humid environment with an average annual rainfall of between 1 500 and 2 000mm these rains are Convection rains as they are created by evaporation of its waters by high temperatures this is typical precipitation around the equatorial belt Due to its complicated geography the precipitation in the department ranges from 250mm in the driest areas to 4 000mm in the cold floors of the Sierra Nevada Environment Edit Kids playing in the beach in Santa Marta Taganga The territory of Magdalena has an area of approximately 23 188 km small compared to other regions but in its territory various types of different ecoregions are found From the beaches and sea landscape in the North the snow covered peaks in the Sierra the swampy marshes in the west the cloud forests to the grasslands inland the urban districts the farmlands the dry desert like the deep rain forest the rocky rivers to many other small ecosystems These ecosystem support different fauna and flora and house many delicate species Ecoregions Edit According to the World Wide Fund for Nature in the Magdalena Department 8 different distinct ecoregions are found in its territory Ecoregion BiomeMagdalena Valley montane forests Neotropical tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forestsMagdalena Uraba moist forests Neotropical tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forestsSinu Valley dry forests Neotropical tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forestsSanta Marta montane forests Neotropical tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forestsSanta Marta paramo Neotropical montane grasslands and shrublandsMagdalena Valley dry forests Neotropical tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forestsGuajira Barranquilla xeric scrub Neotropical deserts and xeric shrublandsMagdalena Santa Marta mangroves Neotropical mangrovePolitics EditAdministrative divisions Edit The Department of Magdalena is subdivided into 30 municipalities and one district The municipalities are governed by a democratically elected municipal mayor and a municipal council The Touristic Cultural and Historic District of Santa Marta is administered by the Municipality of Santa Marta and has special distinction within the country Municipalities Edit Algarrobo Aracataca Ariguani Cerro San Antonio Chibolo Cienaga Concordia El Banco El Pinon El Reten Fundacion Guamal Nueva Granada Pedraza Pinto Pijino Pivijay Plato Pueblo Viejo Remolino Sabanas de San Angel Salamina San Sebastian de Buenavista Santa Ana Santa Marta San Zenon Sitionuevo Tenerife Zapayan Zona BananeraTourism Edit The Quinta de San Pedro Alejandrino Simon Bolivar s death place The Tayrona National Natural Park a unique ecosystem Santa Marta Airport Equestrian statue of Simon Bolivar Casa de la Aduana Santa Marta PortGold Museum Casa de la Aduana Simon Bolivar National Memorial Quinta de San Pedro Alejandrino National Sanctuary and Museum Touristic Cultural and Historic District of Santa Marta Ciudad Perdida World Heritage Site Cienaga Grande de Santa Marta flora and fauna sanctuary Isla de Salamanca natural monument Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta National Park Tayrona National Natural ParkSports EditUnion Magdalena Football Team that until c 2005 that did not make the cut and was sent to the Colombian second division Primera B The team is nicknamed el ciclon bananero The Banana Cyclone References Edit Nuestro departamento Informacion general Geografia Gobernacion del Magdalena Archived from the original on 29 June 2012 Kline Harvey F 2012 Magdalena Department of Historical Dictionary of Colombia Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press p 304 ISBN 978 0 8108 7813 6 DANE Archived from the original on 13 November 2009 Retrieved 13 February 2013 Sub national HDI Area Database Global Data Lab hdi globaldatalab org Retrieved 13 September 2018 Reloj de Poblacion DANE Departamento Administrativo Nacional de Estadisitica Archived from the original on 16 January 2018 Retrieved 6 July 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Magdalena Department Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Magdalena Department amp oldid 1145646315, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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