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Most of Mexico is highland or mountainous and less than 15% of the land is arable; about 25% of the country is forested. Most of the Yucatán peninsula and the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in the southeast is lowland, and there are low-lying strips of land along the Gulf of Mexico, the Pacific Ocean, and the Gulf of California (which separates the Baja, or Lower, California peninsula from the rest of the country).
The heart of Mexico is made up of the Mexican Plateau (c.700
mi/1,130 km long and c.4,000-8,000 ft/1,220-2,440 m high),
which is broken by mountain ranges and segmented by deep
rifts.
The plateau is fringed by two mountain ranges, the Sierra
Madre Oriental (in the east) and the Sierra Madre Occidental
(in the west), which converge just south of the plateau.
Within the plateau are drainage basins, which have no outlet
to the sea and which contain some of the country's major
cities. The Laguna District , one of the drainage basins,
was (1936) the scene of a major experiment in land
reapportionment. In the north the plateau is arid except for
irrigated areas and is used principally for raising
livestock. More ...
In the south the deserts yield to the broad, shallow lakes of a region, comprising the Valley of Mexico, known as the Anáhuac and famous for its rich cultural heritage. South of the Anáhuac, which includes Mexico City, is a chain of extinct volcanoes, including Citlaltépetl , or Orizaba (18,700 ft/5,700 m, the highest point in Mexico), Popocatépetl , and Iztaccihuatl . To the south are jumbled masses of mountains and the Sierra Madre del Sur. |
Among Mexico's few large rivers are the Rio Bravo del Norte, which forms the boundary with Texas, and its tributaries the Río Conchos and the Río Sabinas; the Río Yaqui, Río Fuerte, Río Mezquital, Río Grande de Santiago, and Río Balsas, which flow into the Pacific; and the Río Grijalva and Río Usumacinta, which flow into the Bay of Campeche. The climate of the country varies with the altitude, so that there are hot, temperate, and cool regions— tierra caliente (up to c.3,000 ft/1,220 m), tierra templada (c.3,000-c.6,000 ft/1,220-1,830 m), and tierra friá (above c.6,000 ft/1,830 m).
Mexico's 31 states are Aguascalientes , Baja California , Baja California Sur , Campeche , Chiapas , Chihuahua , Coahuila , Colima , Durango , Guanajuato , Guerrero , Hidalgo , Jalisco , Mexico , Michoacán , Morelos , Nayarit , Nuevo León , Oaxaca , Puebla , Querétaro de Arteaga , Quintana Roo , San Luis Potosí , Sinaloa , Sonora , Tabasco , Tamaulipas , Tlaxcala , Veracruz , Yucatán , and Zacatecas .
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The great majority of the population are of mixed Spanish and indigenous descent and speak Spanish, the official language, as their first language. Various Mayan dialects are also spoken. Since 1920 the population of Mexico has had a very high rate of growth, almost entirely the result of natural increase; from 1940 to 1990 the population grew from 19.6 million to 81.1 million. However, declining fertility rates (from 7 children per woman in 1965 to slightly under 3 in 1998) are slowing down the population growth. Nearly 90% of the people are Roman Catholic and 6% are Protestant. The country has numerous universities, notably in Mexico City, Saltillo, Guadalajara, Monterrey, and Puebla. Since precolonial times Mexican architects, painters, writers, and musicians have produced a rich cultural heritage. See articles on Spanish colonial art and architecture, Mexican art and architecture and Spanish American literature. |
Cozumel
Cozumel
Getting there
Airlines and airports
Geo and brief history
Getting there from Cancun
Diving
Chankanaab Park
Museum of the Island of Cozumel
Isla Mujeres
Brief history
Exploring Isla Mujeres
Places to visit
Contoy Island
Sleeping sharks
Biking
Cancún
Cancún
Cancún geo
Town and beaches
Arrival and transportation
Restaurants
Entertainment and nightlife
Bars and nightclubs
Shows and dinner cruise
Listings
Moving from Cancun
Ferry
Pictures of Mexico
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