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System
of Government
Federative
Republic with a multiparty political system. Democratic elections
for president, senators, representative, state governors and legislators,
mayors and municipal counsels. Brazil is world leader in electronic
online voting (100 million voters)
Population:
170 million
Geography
Brazil is the largest of the Latin American countries. It occupies
an area of 3,286,470 sq. miles (8,511,965 sq. km), nearly half (47.3
percent) of the South American continent. It is the fifth largest
country in the world after the Russian Federation, Canada, China,
and the United States.
The
Equator passes through the north of the country near Macapá.
The Tropic of Capricorn passes through the south near São
Paulo. Brazil's greatest width, 2,684 miles (4,319.4 km), is almost
the same as its greatest distance from north to south, 2,731 miles
(4,394.7 km).
Brazil has 10 neighbors: the Department of French Guyana and the
countries of Suriname, Guyana, Venezuela, and Colombia bound Brazil
on the north. Uruguay and Argentina are on the south, and on the
west are Paraguay, Bolivia, and Peru. Ecuador and Chile are the
only two countries in South America that do not share
a border with Brazil. The Atlantic Ocean extends along the entire
eastern side of the country, giving it a coastline of 4,578 miles
(7,367 km).
Topography
The
landscape of Brazil is dominated by two prominent features, the
Amazon River with its surrounding lowland basin of 1,544,400 sq.
miles (4.000,000 sq. km) and the Central Highlands, a plateau that
rises southward from the great river. Most of the Central Highlands
consists of a tableland varying in altitude from 984 to 1,640 feet
(300 to 500 meters) above sea level, broken by a number of low mountain
ranges and cut by deep valleys. The highlands ascend steeply in
the east forming an escarpment, where several peaks attain an altitude
of 8,202 feet (2,500 meters) or more, and then drop precipitously
to a narrow Atlantic coastal plain. A network of high mountain ranges
runs from the south of the country to the northeast forming a continental
divide between the Atlantic Ocean and the interior. Brazil's highest
peak, Pico da Neblina, reaching 9,888 feet (3,014 meters), is in
the north, close to the Venezuelan border.
Rivers
Brazil
has one of the most extensive river systems in the world with eight
drainage basins. The Amazon and the Tocantins-Araguaia basins
in the north account for 56 percent of Brazil's total drainage area.
The Amazon River, the world's largest river in volume of water and
second longest after the Nile, is 4,087 miles (6,577 km) long, of
which 2,246 miles (3,615 km) are in Brazilian territory. The river
is navigable by ocean steamers as far as 2,414 miles (3,885 km)
upstream, reaching Iquitos in Peru.
The
Paraná-Paraguay river system drains the area from the southwestern
portion of the state of Minas Gerais southward until it reaches
the Atlantic through the River Plate near Buenos
Aires, Argentina. Brazil's two southernmost states are drained through
the Uruguay River also into the Prata.
The São Francisco River is the largest river wholly within
Brazil, flowing for over 1,000 miles (1,609 km) northward before
it turns eastward into the Atlantic. It rises, like the Paraná
and the Tocantins, in the Central Highlands of the country. The
upper river is navigable for shallow draft riverboats in some areas,
but only the last 172 miles (277 km) of the lower river is navigable
for ocean-going ships.
The hydroelectric potential of Brazil, according to the data provided
by Eletrobrás in 1994, is of 127,867.6 MW/year of energy.
Of this 24.42% is in operation and/or under construction, 35.80%
are in inventory and 39.78% are estimated.
Climate
Average
Annual Temperatures
Although 90 percent of the country is within the tropical zone,
more than 60 percent of the population live in areas where altitude,
sea winds, or cold polar fronts moderate the temperature. There
are five climatic regions in Brazil: equatorial, tropical, semi
arid, highland tropical, and subtropical. Plateau cities such as
São Paulo, Brasília, and Belo Horizonte have very
mild climates averaging 66°F (19°C). Rio de Janeiro, Recife,
and Salvador on the coast have warm climates balanced by the constancy
of the Trade Winds. In the southern Brazilian cities of Porto Alegre
and Curitiba, the subtropical climate is similar to parts of the
U.S. and Europe with frosts occurring with some frequency. In this
region temperatures in winter can fall below freezing.
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Despite
the popular image of the Amazon as a region of blistering heat,
temperatures of more than 90°F (32°C) are rarely experienced
there. In fact, the annual average temperature in the Amazon region
is in the range of 72°F to 79°F (22°C to 26°C), with only a very small
seasonal variation between the warmest and the coldest months. The
hottest part of Brazil is the northeast where, during the dry season,
between May and November, temperatures of more than 100°F (38°C)
are recorded frequently. The northeast has greater seasonal variation
in temperatures than does the Amazon region. Along the Atlantic
coast from Recife to Rio de Janeiro, mean temperatures range from
73°F to 81°F (23°C to 27°C). Inland, on higher ground temperatures
are lower, ranging from 64°F to 70°F (18°C to 21°C). South
of Rio, the seasons are more noticeable and the annual range of
temperature greater. The average temperature for this part of the
country is in the range between 63°F to 66°F (17°C to 19°C).
Average
Annual Rainfall
Brazil's most intense rainfall is found around the mouth of the
Amazon River near the city of Belém, and also in the vast
upper regions of Amazônia where more than 78 inches (2,000
millimeters) of rain falls every year. Another important region
of heavy rainfall is along the edge of the great escarpment in the
state of São Paulo. Most of Brazil, however, has moderate
rainfall of between 39 to 59 inches (1,000 to 1,500 millimeters)
a year, with most of the rain falling in the summer, between December
and April. The winters tend to be dry. The driest part of the country
is the northeast, the so-called "polygon of drought",
and encompassing 10 percent of the country's territory.
Seasons
Seasons in Brazil are the reverse of those in the U.S. and Europe:
Spring = September 22 to December 21
Summer = December 22 to March 21
Autumn = March 22 to June 21
Winter = June 22 to September 21
Vegetation
The varieties of climates, soil and drainage conditions
are reflected in Brazil's vegetation. In the Amazon Basin and in
those places along the Atlantic coast where the rainfall is very
heavy, there is tropical rain forest composed of broadleaf evergreen
trees growing luxuriantly. The rain forest is made up of a great
many different species, as many as 3,000 in a sq. mile (2.6 sq.
km). In the lowlands and plateaus of the eastern coast where rainfall
is slightly less and the dry season is really dry, there is semi-deciduous
forest, where the trees are smaller than in the rain forest and
lose their leaves in the dry season. In the semi-arid northeast,
the caatinga, a dry bush, predominates. The greater portion of the
central part of Brazil is covered with a woodland savanna known
as the cerrado. This is a special type of land combining sparse
scrub trees and dryness resistant grasses. In the south, needle-leafed
pinewoods (Paraná-pine or Araucária) cover the highlands;
grassland covers the sea-level plains. The Mato Grosso swamplands
(Pantanal Mato-grossense), a plain which covers 88,803 sq. miles
(230,000 sq. km) in the western portion of the center of the country,
is covered in tall grasses, weeds, and widely dispersed trees. Large
patches of it are submerged during the rainy season. The Amazon
Basin and the Pantanal Mato-Grossense, already much altered by man's
actions, constitute two of the world's largest biological reserves.
Fauna
Of the twelve categories of mammals that inhabit the tropics of
the Western Hemisphere, eleven are present in Brazil, representing
over 600 species. This includes several species of the cat family
such as the jaguar and smaller cats such as the puma, jaguarundi,
and the ocelot. Other mammals include: sloths, anteaters, tapirs,
armadillos, marine dolphins, capybaras (a large aquatic rodent,
some weighting up to 145 pounds (66 kilograms), and 30 species
of monkeys. Brazil has a larger variety of birds than any other
country, with 1,600 species including many varieties of parrots.
There are at least 40 species of turtles, 120 lizards, 230 snakes,
five species of alligators, 331 species of amphibians, and 1,500
species of freshwater fish. Naturalists have cataloged over 1,000,000
invertebrates in Brazil of which more than 700,000 are insects.
A study conducted by the Brazilian Statistical Institute (IBGE)
in 1990 identified 303 endangered species and sub-species in Brazil.
The Amazon forest contains the largest single reserve of biological
organisms in the world. No one really knows how many species there
are in the Amazon forest, but scientists estimate that there are
between 800,000 and 5 million species living there, amounting to
15 to 30 percent of all the species in the entire world. As naturalists
catalogue new species of freshwater fish, their findings suggest
that there may be as many as 3,000 kinds of fish in the Amazon's
rivers and lakes.
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