San Juan Province (Argentina)

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San Juan


Coat of Arms

Capital San Juan
Area 89,651 km²
Population 620,023 (2001)
Density 6.92/km²
Governor José Luis Gioja (2003-2007)
Demonym Sanjuanino
ISO 3166-2 AR-J

San Juan is a province of Argentina, located in the western part of the country. Neighbouring provinces are, moving clockwise from the north, La Rioja, San Luis and Mendoza. It borders Chile on the west.

Contents

Huarpes, Diaguitas, Capazanes, Olongastas and Yacampis, with influences of the Inca empire, inhabited the area before the arrival of the Spanish conquistadores.

The city of San Juan de la Frontera was founded by Juan Jufré y Montesa in 1562 and relocated 2 kilometres south in 1593 due to the frequent flooding of the San Juan River.

In 1776, the year in which San Juan passed to the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, an earthquake almost completely destroyed the city.

The town was a great supporter of José de San Martín's expedition to cross the Andes, supplying gold, men and mules.

In 1944 a moderate, yet highly destructive earthquake near the capital destroyed most of the city and killed 10,000 people. A fundraiser to benefit the victims of the quake was instrumental in the meeting of Colonel Juan Perón and his eventual wife and political companion Eva Duarte. [[1]]

The province is part of the continental semi-desert Cuyo region. The arid plains on the east, with a few low sierras (hills), swiftly turn into 6,000-meter-high mountain peaks towards the west. Both areas are subject to the dry hot Zonda (a kind of Föhn wind). Most of the precipitations take place during the summer, often as storms.

The hot wind has modeled the clay-rich red soil into Pampa del Leoncito (Reserva Natural Estricta El Leoncito) and Valle de la Luna (Parque Provincial Ischigualasto) 200 million year old geological formations.

The Jáchal and San Juan rivers, both part of Desaguadero River system, are the source of fertile valleys and centre of the province's economy. The San Juan River finishes in the Huanacache lagoons (sometimes called Guanacache), on the southeast.

Viticulture is the main crop of the province's economy traditionally linked to agriculture, with some 500 km² (56% of the productive area), and the later wine production from 90% of the crop. San Juan is the second Argentine wine producer after the Mendoza Province. Other plantations include tomato, maize, potato, fig, peach and many others.

Also important is the mining industry of very different materials, from gold and lead to graphite and clay. Other industries include food industry and conserves, textiles and mineral processing.

Energy production is mainly hydroelectrical, produced by a few dams such as Quebrada de Ullum, La Roza, San Emiliano and El Pinar Station, which also help regulate water the level for irrigation of the arid lands. Electricity is also produced, in a lesser proportion, by thermal power stations.

The tourism is not very developed in the province and consist mainly of local visitors. Its main attractions are the city of San Juan (and birth house of Sarmiento) the Ischigualasto Provincial Park, the Ullum Dam, the Pismanta hot springs, and the pagan Difunta Correa shrine.

The province is divided into 19 departments (Spanish: departamentos).

Department (Capital)

  1. Albardón (Albardón)
  2. Angaco (Villa del Salvador)
  3. Calingasta (Calingasta)
  4. Capital (San Juan)
  5. Caucete (Caucete)
  6. Chimbas (Villa Paula A. de Sarmiento)
  7. Iglesia (Rodeo)
  8. Jáchal (San José de Jáchal)
  9. Nueve de Julio (Nueve de Julio, San Juan)
  10. Pocito (Villa Alberastain)
  11. Rawson (Villa Krause)
  12. Rivadavia (Rivadavia)
  13. San Martín (Villa San Isidro)
  14. Santa Lucía (Santa Lucía)
  15. Sarmiento (Villa Media Agua)
  16. Ullum (Ullum)
  17. Valle Fértil (San Agustín del Valle Fértil)
  18. Veinticinco de Mayo (Villa Santa Rosa)
  19. Zonda (Zonda)

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