San Juan Province
Basic data | |
---|---|
( Details ) |
( Details ) |
Capital: | San Juan |
Surface:
- Total |
Rank 15 of 24 89,651 km² |
Population :
- Total 2010 |
Rank 13 of 24
681,055 inhabitants |
ISO 3166-2 code: | AR-J |
politics | |
Region : | Region del Nuevo Cuyo |
Structure: | 19 departments |
Gobernador: | Sergio Uñac |
Website of the Province of San Juan |
San Juan is a province in western Argentina . The province is surrounded by the provinces of La Rioja in the north, San Luis in the southeast and Mendoza in the south. In addition, San Juan borders Chile in the west .
Geography and climate
The province is crossed by two striking mountain ranges: the Andes in the west and the Sierra de Valle Fértil , which belongs to the Sierras Pampeanas , in the east. The highest point is the Mercedario with 6770 m, which is one of the highest mountains in America.
The vegetation largely corresponds to that of Monte , a steppe-like bush landscape with a few smaller desert areas. Important rivers are the Río Salado del Oeste in the east, which takes the two names Río Bermejo and Río Desaguadero in the province , the Río Jáchal in the north and the Río San Juan in the south.
The climate is temperate, with hot summers (an average of 22 to 27 ° C depending on the altitude) and cool winters (6 to 10 ° C). The amount of precipitation is low and concentrated in the summer months, between 100 mm in the west and 200 mm in the east. The temperature fluctuations between day and night are considerable because of the dry air and are usually above 20 ° C.
population
Because of the dry, steppe-like character of the greater part of the province, the majority of the population lives concentrated in a few oasis valleys. Over 80% live in Gran San Juan (approx. 450,000 inhabitants), the greater area around San Juan , which is located in the oasis of Tulum . Other important cities are Caucete in the east of the province (38,000 inhabitants) and San José de Jáchal (11,000 inhabitants) in the north.
The indigenous indigenous population ( Huarpes ) is numerically very small, their culture and language are considered to be almost extinct. According to the 2001 census, there are still 13,838 huarpes that can be found in San Juan, Mendoza, San Luis and Buenos Aires .
Administrative division
The province of San Juan is divided into 19 departments. Departments and municipalities (municipios) are territorially identical.
Department | Capital | Area in km² | Population (2010) |
Albardón | General San Martín Villa | 945 | 23,888 |
Angaco | El Salvador | 1,865 | 8,125 |
Calingasta | Tamberías | 22,589 | 8,588 |
Capital | San Juan | 30th | 109.123 |
Caucete | Caucete | 7.502 | 38,343 |
Chimbas | Chimbas | 62 | 87,258 |
Iglesia | rodeo | 19,801 | 9,099 |
Jáchal | San José de Jáchal | 14,749 | 21,730 |
Nueve de Julio | 9 de Julio | 185 | 9,307 |
Pocito | Villa Aberastain | 515 | 53,162 |
Rawson | Villa Krause | 300 | 114,368 |
Rivadavia | Rivadavia | 157 | 82,641 |
San Martín | San Isidro | 435 | 11,115 |
Santa Lucía | Santa Lucía | 45 | 48,087 |
Sarmiento | Villa Media Agua | 2,782 | 22,131 |
Ullum | Villa Ibáñez | 4,391 | 4,886 |
Valle Fértil | Villa San Agustin | 6,419 | 7,222 |
Veinticinco de Mayo | Villa Santa Rosa | 4,519 | 17,119 |
Zonda | Villa Basilio Nievas | 2,360 | 4,863 |
tourism
The province is still very little affected by tourism . Of particular interest is the Natural Park Ischigualasto , also known as the Valle de la Luna, which the World Heritage of UNESCO heard and has several strange rock formations. Other tourist locations are Barreal in the Andes, in the vicinity of which there is also the northernmost ski area in Argentina, and Villa San Agustín in the eastern Sierren. Besides Ischigualasto there are two other national parks in the province: El Leoncito in the south and San Guillermo in the north.
Web links
Coordinates: 31 ° 0 ′ S , 69 ° 0 ′ W