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Showing posts with label Argentina-UNESCO 8. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Argentina-UNESCO 8. Show all posts

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Los Glaciares National Park

Card No. 133
Another UNESCO Postcard from Postcrossing

The national park, created in 1937, is the second largest in Argentina. Its name refers to the giant ice cap in the Andes range that feeds 47 large glaciers, of which only 13 flow towards the Atlantic Ocean. The ice cap is the largest outside of Antarctica and Greenland. In other parts of the world, glaciers start at a height of at least 2,500 meters above mean sea level, but due to the size of the ice cap, these glaciers begin at only 1,500m, sliding down to 200m AMSL, eroding the surface of the mountains that support them. At the Santa Cruz Province, in Argentine Patagonia. It comprises an area of 4459 km². In 1981 it was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO. Read more

Information Obtained From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Jesuit Missions of the Guaranis: San Ignacio Mini, Santa Ana, Nuestra Señora de Loreto and Santa Maria Mayor (Argentina), Ruins of Sao Miguel das Miss

Card No 124
Many thanks to my FB friend Gabriel Alejandro Etinzon

San Ignacio Miní was one of the many missions founded in 1632 by the Jesuits in the Americas during the Spanish colonial period near present-day San Ignacio valley, some 60km north of Posadas, Misiones Province, Argentina. In 1984 the ruins were declared as World Heritage Site by UNESCO, and currently hold the Museo Jesuítico de San Ignacio Miní museum. Read more

Information Obtained From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Monday, November 7, 2011

Iguazu National Park

Card No 122Many thanks to my FB friend Gabriel Alejandro Etinzon

The semicircular waterfall at the heart of this site is some 80 m high and 2,700 m in diameter and is situated on a basaltic line spanning the border between Argentina and Brazil. Made up of many cascades producing vast sprays of water, it is one of the most spectacular waterfalls in the world. The Iguazú River ends in the Paraná River 23 km beyond the falls, after a 1320 km course. Inside the park it becomes up to 1,500 m wide and turns first south, then north, forming a large U-shape. Read More

Information Obtained from From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia & UNESCO

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