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Argentina
Bolivia
Brazil
Chile
Colombia
Ecuador
Guyana
Paraguay
Peru
Suriname
Uruguay
Venezuela
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Continents: SOUTH AMERICA |
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outh
America, the planet's 4th
largest continent, includes (12)
countries and (3) major territories.
It contains the massive Amazon River and
surrounding basin - the largest
tropical rain forest in the world;
the toothy-edged Andes Mountains, that
stretch the entire length of the
continent, and some of the most
diverse and spectacular landforms on
the planet.
South America is a continent situated in the western hemisphere and, mostly, the southern hemisphere, bordered on the west by the Pacific Ocean and on the north and east by the Atlantic Ocean; North America and the Caribbean Sea lie to the northwest.
As part of the Americas like North America, South America is named after Amerigo Vespucci, who was the first European to suggest that the Americas were not the East Indies, but a New World unknown to Europeans.
South America has an area of 17,840,000 km² (6,890,000 sq mi), or almost 3.5% of the Earth's surface. As of 2005, its population was estimated at more than 371,000,000. South America ranks fourth in area (after Asia, Africa, and North America) and fifth in population (after Asia, Africa, Europe, and North America).
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HOT
PLACES |
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Rapa Nui National
Park
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Rapa Nui, the
indigenous name of
Easter Island, bears
witness to a unique
cultural phenomenon.
A society of
Polynesian origin
that settled there c.
A.D. 300 established
a powerful,
imaginative and
original tradition
of monumental
sculpture and
architecture, free
from any external
influence. From the
10th to the 16th
century this society
built shrines and
erected enormous
stone figures known
as moai, which
created an
unrivalled cultural
landscape that
continues to
fascinate people
throughout the world. |
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Historic Sanctuary
of Machu Picchu
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Machu Picchu stands
2,430 m above
sea-level, in the
middle of a tropical
mountain forest, in
an extraordinarily
beautiful setting.
It was probably the
most amazing urban
creation of the Inca
Empire at its height;
its giant walls,
terraces and ramps
seem as if they have
been cut naturally
in the continuous
rock escarpments.
The natural setting,
on the eastern
slopes of the Andes,
encompasses the
upper Amazon basin
with its rich
diversity of flora
and fauna. |
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Los Glaciares
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The Los Glaciares
National Park is an
area of exceptional
natural beauty, with
rugged, towering
mountains and
numerous glacial
lakes, including
Lake Argentino,
which is 160 km long.
At its farthest end,
three glaciers meet
to dump their
effluvia into the
milky grey glacial
water, launching
massive igloo
icebergs into the
lake with thunderous
splashes.
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Brazilian Atlantic
Islands
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Peaks of the
Southern Atlantic
submarine ridge form
the Fernando de
Noronha Archipelago
and Rocas Atoll off
the coast of Brazil.
They represent a
large proportion of
the island surface
of the South
Atlantic and their
rich waters are
extremely important
for the breeding and
feeding of tuna,
shark, turtle and
marine mammals. The
islands are home to
the largest
concentration of
tropical seabirds in
the Western Atlantic.
Baia de Golfinhos
has an exceptional
population of
resident dolphin and
at low tide the
Rocas Atoll provides
a spectacular
seascape of lagoons
and tidal pools
teeming with fish. |
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