Online Encyclopedia

MAULE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 904 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MAULE  , a

coast province of central Chile, bounded N. byTalca, E. by
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Linares and Nuble, and S. by Concepcion, and lying between the rivers Maule and Itata, which form its
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northern and
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southern boundaries . Pop . (1895), 119,791;
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area, 2475 sq. m . Maule is traversed from north to south by the coast range and its surfaces are much broken . The Buchupureo
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river flows westward across the province . The
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climate is mild and healthy . Agriculture and stock-raising are the
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principal occupations, and hides, cattle, wheat and
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timber are exported . Transport facilities are afforded by the Maule and the Itata, which are navigable, and by a branch of the government railway from Cauquenes to Parral, an important
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town of southern Linares . The provincial capital, Cauquenes (pop., in 1895, 8574; 1902 estimate, 9895), is centrally situated on the Buchupureo river, on the eastern slopes of the coast cordilleras . The town and
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port of Constituci6n (pop., in 1900, about 7000) on the south
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bank of the Maule, one mile above its mouth, was formerly the capital of the province . The port suffers from a dangerous bar at the mouth of the river, but is connected with
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Talca by
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rail and has a considerable trade . The Maule river, from which the province takes its name, is of historic
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interest because it is said to have marked the southern limits of the Inca
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Empire .

It rises in the

Laguna del Maule, an Andean lake near the
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Argentine frontier, 7218 ft. above sea-level, and flows westward about 140 M. to the Pacific, into which it discharges in 350 18' S . The upper
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part of its drainage basin, to which the Anuario Hydrografico gives an area of 8000 sq. m., contains the volcanoes of
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San Pedro (11,800 ft.), the Descabezado (12,795 ft.), and others of the same
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group of
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lower elevations . The upper course and tributaries of the Maule, principally in the province of Linares, are largely used for irrigation .

End of Article: MAULE
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