The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and...

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The Andean Countries World Geography

Transcript of The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and...

Page 1: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

The Andean Countries

World Geography

Page 2: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

The AndesForm the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

Only taller range: Himalayas

Shape physical geography… which inevitibly effects the CULTURE, ECONOMY, etc.

Page 3: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

3 Major Environments:

Coastal Plain

Highlands

Tropical Forests

Page 5: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

Coastal Plain Characteristics:Flat (ish) area between

the mountains and the sea.

At points it is very small (where the mountains reach almost to the sea), while at others it is almost 100 miles inland.

Page 6: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

Atacama DesertCoastal Plain in Northern Chile

So dry it has preserved relics from ancient times such as textiles (woven hundreds of years ago) and mud¿brick buildings.

Page 7: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

HighlandsRange from 6,500 to 16,000 feet above sea level

Altiplano = highlands in Peru & Bolivia

Páramos = highlands in Ecuador

Page 8: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

Highlands cont.Climate varies with elevation

Alpine Tundra: vegetation at high altitudes (above the TIMBER LINE, boundary above which continuous forest vegetation cannot grow)

Page 9: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

Tropical ForestsSelva: name for the forested regions in Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia◦Rain forests of the Amazon River begin here◦Jaguars, hummingbirds, monkeys, and toucans live here, but few people

Page 10: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

Economics and Culture:

Vertical trade: crops grown in higher elevations (potatoes, cabbages) traded for lower elevations (bananas, sugar cane)

25-55% of the population of Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru are Native Americans

Page 11: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

Andean Indians developed certain physical characteristics (larger hearts and lungs) to allow them to live in regions with less oxygen.

Page 12: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

EcuadorFrom “equator”¼ of 12,900,000 people are from Indian descent

Quechua (KECH wah) = language, from Incas

Subsistence agriculture10 % of population has European background… but they own most of the large farms and factories (thus have substantial influence)

Page 13: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

1960sOil discovered in the selva lowlands

Challenge to transfer from mountains to the coast (pipelines built)

Petroleum became important export

Page 14: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

PeruFormer heart of the Inca Empire

Fell to Spaniards in early 1500s

45% of population are Native Americans and speak Quechua or Aymara

Subsistence farming, herding alpacas or llamas are main economic activities

Page 15: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

Mestizos constitute the other majority of the population

Live in urban areas or on the coastal plain

Work for low wages in factories producing fish meal (for animal feed) or on plnatations (cotton, sugar cane, rice)

Poverty and unemployment are major issues

Page 16: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

Asian immigration to Peru:◦1990 election of first Peruvian president of Japanese ancestry◦Improved economy and suppressed guerrilla rebellion◦Allegations of corruption led him to resign

Page 17: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

BoliviaLandlocked: lacks profitable coastal ports

Many minerals, but the best have been removed

Most Bolivians are Indians, mostly subsistence farmers living in the highlands

Climate varies from humid and tropical to cold and semiarid

Page 18: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

Chile“End of the land”2,700 miles long, but only averages 100 miles wide

2/3 of the population (15,000,000) are mestizos

¼ of the population is of European descent (mostly Spanish, British, German)

Relatively few Indians

Page 19: The Andean Countries World Geography. The Andes Form the backbone of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile (longest unbroken mountain chain in the world).

Santiago: the capital, is home to about 1/3 of the country's population

High unemployment, unskilled, illiterate workers from the countryside

About 3 million people (or 1/5) live below the poverty line