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(Bozica Vekic) #1

Spanish influence remains strong in the four


countries in this region that were once


Spanish colonies (Peru, Ecuador, Colombia,


and Venezuela). The others were colonized by


Britain (Guyana), the Netherlands (Suriname),


and France (French Guiana) – the last European


colony. The people are a mix of native peoples,


Europeans, and descendants of African slaves.


234 People and Places


4 MACHU PICCHU, PERU
The ancient ceremonial site
of Machu Picchu, high up in
the Andes in Peru, was never
discovered by the Spanish
conquerors and gradually fell
into ruin. It was found in 1911
and is now a major tourist sight.

SALT MINING, COLOMBIA 3
Along Colombia’s flat Caribbean
coast, workers remove sand to
create tidal pools, which are
flooded at high tide. The sun dries
them out, leaving sea salt behind.

WHAT IS LATIN AMERICA?
South America, Mexico, Central America, and the
Caribbean islands where Spanish is spoken (Cuba, Puerto
Rico, and Dominican Republic) are called Latin America.
People here speak the Latin-based languages Spanish
and Portuguese, which they learned from the invaders
who settled there in the 16th century. Culture, language,
and religion still link Latin America, Spain, and Portugal.

HOW DO PEOPLE MAKE A LIVING IN THE ANDES?
Most people in the Andes are farmers. Because fertile
land is scarce, they cut terraces into the steep hillsides.
Crops are chosen to suit either the hot, humid climate
of the lower slopes or the cooler climate higher up.
Animals such as the llama and alpaca are also kept
for food and wool, which is used for clothing.

HAVE NATURAL RESOURCES HELPED
NORTHERN SOUTH AMERICA?
This region has immense oil and mineral wealth: the
oil reserves in Venezuela are the biggest outside the
Middle East, and Colombia produces over half the
world’s emeralds. But despite this wealth, public
services have been neglected, and many people remain
poor because the dangerous mining work is low-paid.

ARE ECUADOR’S MANGROVE SWAMPS IN DANGER?
The mangrove swamps of Ecuador’s Pacific coast teem
with shrimp, and are a vital source of food, firewood,
and timber for local people. Shrimp are Ecuador’s
second biggest export after oil, but while large shrimp
farms have created much-needed jobs, they are slowly
destroying the environment on which they depend.

One of the two
mountain peaks
that overlook
this high city

Below these houses,
there are terraces,
built against the
mouintainside,
for farming.

More than
3,000 steps
connect the
different levels

Temples, homes, and
other ceremonial
buildings are built
around a central square

Northern South America


northern
South
America
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