Alagoas
From Free net encyclopedia
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Flag of Alagoas | ||
Image:Brazil Alagoas.png | ||
See other Brazilian States | ||
Capital | Maceió | |
Largest City | Maceió | |
Area | 27 818 km² | |
Population - Total - Density | 2 822 621 101.5 inh./km² | |
Governor | Ronaldo Lessa | |
Demonym | Alagoano | |
HDI (2000) | 0.649 – medium | |
Timezone | GMT-3 | |
ISO 3166-2 | BR-AL |
Alagoas (AL), pron. IPA: /Template:IPA/ Template:Ref, is a small state in northeastern Brazil lying between the states of Pernambuco and Sergipe; touching the state of Bahia along a part of its southwestern border. The southern border of Alagoas is defined by the Rio São Francisco (São Francisco River). Alagoas has an area of 27,933 square km. and a population of approximately 2,818,000. The capital city is Maceió.
The state's name originates with the lakes along its coast near the city of Maceió. The coast is bordered by fringing reefs and many fine beaches. Behind the beaches, sometimes only hundreds of meters and defined by steep scarps, lies a stretch of green coastal hills having enough rainfall for considerable agriculture and scarce remnants of the Mata Atlântica (Atlantic Rain Forest) that now is largely limited to steep hill tops. This is the area long dominated by sugar cane.
Still further inland lies the Sertão of the Northeast region of the nation. The Sertão is a high dry region dominated by scrub that is often thorn filled and sometimes toxic, the caatinga. This area and its people is famed in legend and song. It is the land of the cowboy who is clad from head to toe (if he is lucky) with very thick leather to avoid the tearing vegetation.
The economy has been agricultural, dependent largely on large sugar cane plantations with some tobacco. Sugar cane formed the basis for an alcohol industry that is in decline. Small to medium sized tanker ships took alcohol onboard in Maceió's port with considerable frequency during the peak period. Such loads still take place with less frequency. Another local industry is based on chemical products from brine pumped from deep wells on the outskirts of Maceió.
In the last twenty years the tourist industry has found the beaches and Maceió itself has changed from a rather sleepy little port with coconut palm plantations along its beaches to high rise hotels. The northern coast, particularly around the towns Maragogi and Japaratinga is beginning to see some of this development in the form of resorts attracting people from the south and some from Europe.
Cities and Historic Towns (H)
- Arapiraca
- Coruripe
- Maceió
- Maragogi
- Marechal Deodoro (H)
- Palmeira dos Indios
- Penedo (H)
- Piranhas (H)
- Porto de Pedras (H)
- Santana do Ipanema
- União dos Palmares
See also:
- List of cities in Brazil (all cities and municipalities)
Notes
- Template:Note The presented pronunciation is in Brazilian Portuguese. The European Portuguese pronunciation is: /Template:IPA/.
External links
- Alagoas (In Portuguese with tourism oriented information.)
- Estado de Alagoas (In Portuguese with flag and outline map.)
- Brazilian Embassy in London: São Francisco River
States of Brazil | Image:Flag of Brazil.svg |
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Acre | Alagoas | Amapá | Amazonas | Bahia | Ceará | Espírito Santo | Goiás | Maranhão | Mato Grosso | Mato Grosso do Sul | Minas Gerais | Pará | Paraíba | Paraná | Pernambuco | Piauí | Rio de Janeiro | Rio Grande do Norte | Rio Grande do Sul | Rondônia | Roraima | Santa Catarina | São Paulo | Sergipe | Tocantins | |
Federal District: Brazilian Federal District |