North Region, Brazil
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The North region of Brazil was the last region to be given importance by the Brazilian government, already when it was independent from Portugal. It is the least inhabited of the country, and contributes with a minor percentage in the national GDP and population. It is composed by the states of Acre, Amapá, Amazonas, Pará, Rondônia, Roraima and Tocantins.
[edit] General Facts
- Area: 3,869,637,9 km² (45.28%)
- Population: 12,833,383 hab (3,31 hab/km²; 6.2%)
- GDP: ~US $9.6 billion (2%), per capita US $748
- HDI: ~0.790
- Climate: Equatorial (high temperatures and high annual precipitation)
- Largest Cities: Manaus (1,403,796); Belém (1,279,861); Ananindeua (392,947); Porto Velho (314,525); Macapá (282,745); Santarém (262,721); Rio Branco (252,885); Boa Vista (200,383); Palmas (137,045).
- Economy: Iron, Energy production, Electronics, Agriculture.
[edit] See also
- Brazil
- Socio-Geographic Division
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