Mato Grosso

From Free net encyclopedia

Mato Grosso
Image:Bandeira de Mato Grosso.svg
Flag of Mato Grosso
Image:Brazil Mato Grosso.png
See other Brazilian States
Capital Cuiabá
Largest City Cuiabá
Area 906,806.9 km²
Population
  - Total
  - Density

2,375,549
2.6 inh./km²
Governor Blairo Maggi
Demonym Mato-grossense
HDI (2000) 0.773 – medium
Timezone GMT-4
ISO 3166-2 BR-MT

Mato Grosso (pron. IPA: /Template:IPA/) is one of the states of Brazil, located in the western part of the country. Neighboring states are (from west clockwise) Rondônia, Amazonas, Pará, Tocantins, Goiás and Mato Grosso do Sul. It also borders Bolivia to the southwest.

The name literally means "thick jungle". Apart from the state capital, Cuiabá, there are few cities. The most important are

See also:

Mato Grosso is the site of some of the worst deforestation in the world.

Contents

Geography

The state contains the swamps of the Pantanal and the Planalto do Mato Grosso. Started in the 1970s, the Transpantaneira is a bare-earth highway which was originally planned to cross the Pantanal, but it was never finished and is now mostly used for touristic tours. Mato Grosso is an essentially agrarian state, with economy based on cattle-raising. The Chapada do Guimarães National Park is located in the state. The Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso (UFMT) is spread out all over the state with 4 campuses, 5 distance education centres, one experimental farm, one research base at the Pantanal, the University Hospital and 10 teaching advanced posts. The University is led by Rector Paulo Speller since 2000, who should stay in office up to 2008.

History

In 1977 the state was split into two halves, with Mato Grosso do Sul becoming a new state. The Bororo Indians live in the Mato Grosso area.

Mato Grosso is also the state in Brazil in which the most deforestation of Brazil's portion of the Amazon Rainforest has taken place.

Flag

The flag has the same colors as the national flag, with blue symbolizing the sky, green the vegetation, and white standing for peace. The star is yellow to symbolize the gold which attracted the first settlers. The flag was adopted by Decree No. 2 of January 31, 1890, just few days after the adoption of the national flag. The Mato Grosso state flag was abolished by Law No. 1.046 of October 8, 1929, but reinstated by article 140 of the Constitution of the State of Mato Grosso on July 11, 1947.

</table>

External links


States of Brazil Image:Flag of Brazil.svg
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

ca:Mato Grosso de:Mato Grosso es:Mato Grosso eo:Mato-Groso fr:Mato Grosso gl:Mato Groso - Mato Grosso id:Mato Grosso it:Mato Grosso ka:მატუ-გროსუ kw:Mato Grosso nl:Mato Grosso no:Mato Grosso pl:Mato Grosso pt:Mato Grosso ru:Мату-Гросу fi:Mato Grosso sv:Mato Grosso