Online Encyclopedia

GOYAZ

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 304 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GOYAZ  , an inland

state of Brazil, bounded by Matto Grosso and Para on the W., Maranhao,
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Bahia and Minas Geraes on the E., and Minas Geraes and Matto Grosso on the S . Pop . (189o) 227,572; (1900) 255,284, including many
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half-civilized Indians and many half-breeds .
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Area, 288,549 sq. m . The outline of the state is that of a roughly-shaped wedge with the thin edge extending northward between and up to the junction of the rivers Araguaya and Upper Tocantins, and its length is nearly 150 of latitude . The state lies wholly within the
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great Brazilian plateau region, but its
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surface is much broken towards the N. by the deeply eroded valleys of the Araguaya and Upper Tocantins rivers and their tributaries . The general slope of the plateau is toward the N., and the drainage of the state is chiefly through the above-named rivers—the
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principal tributaries of the Araguaya being the Grande and Vermelho, and of the Upper Tocantins, the Manoel Alves Grande, Somno, Paranan and Maranhao . A considerable
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part of
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southern Goyaz, however, slopes southward and the drainage is through numerous small streams flowing into the Paranahyba, a large tributary of the
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Parana . The general
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elevation of the plateau is estimated to be about 2700 ft., and the highest elevation was reported in 1892 to be the Serra dos Pyreneos (5250 ft.) .
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Crossing the state N.N.E. to S.S.W. there is a well-defined chain of mountains, of which the Pyreneos,
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Santa Rita and Santa Martha ranges form parts, but their elevation above the plateau is not great . The surface of the plateau is generally open campo and scrubby arboreal growth called caatingas, but the streams are generally bordered with
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forest, especially in the deeper valleys . Towards the N. the forest becomes denser and of the character of the
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Amazon Valley .

The

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climate of the plateau is usually described as temperate, but it is essentially sub-tropical . The valley regions are tropical, and malarial fevers are
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common . The cultivation of the
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soil is limited to
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local needs, except in the production of
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tobacco, which is exported to neighbouring states . The open campos afford good pasturage, and live stock is largely exported . Gold-
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mining has been carried on in a
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primitive manner for more than two centuries, but the output has never been large and no very rich mines have been discovered . Diamonds have been found, but only to a very limited extent . There is a considerable export of
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quartz crystal, commercially known. as " Brazilian pebbles," used in
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optical
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work . Although the
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northern and southern extremities of Goyfiz lie within two great
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river systems—the Tocantins and Parana—the upper courses of which are navigable, both of them are obstructed by falls . The only outlet for the state has been by means of mule trains to the railway termini of Sao Paulo and Minas Geraes, pending the extension of
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railways from both of those states, one entering Goyaz by way of Catalao, near the southern boundary, and the other at some point further N . The capital of the state is GoYAZ, or
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Villa-
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Boa de Goyaz, a mining
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town on the Rio Vermelho, a tributary of the Araguaya rising on the northern slopes of the Serra de Santa Rita . Pop . (1890) 6807 .

Gold was discovered here in 1682 by Bartholomeu Bueno, the first

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European explorer of this region, and the settlement founded by him was called Santa Anna, which is still the name of the parish . The site of the town is a barren, rocky mountain valley, 190o ft. above sea-level, in which the heat is most oppressive at times and the nights are unpleasantly cold . Goyaz is the see of a bishopric founded in 1826, and possesses a small
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cathedral and some churches .

End of Article: GOYAZ
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GOYANNA, or GOIANA
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JAN JOSEPHSZOON VAN GOYEN (1596-1656)

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