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SINALOA , a N. See also: state of Mexico, bounded N. by Sonora and See also: Chihuahua, E. by See also: Durango, S. by See also: Tepic, and W. by the Gulf of California, with a See also: coast See also: line of nearly 400 M
.
See also: Area, 33,671 sq. m
.
Pop
.
(1900), 296,701, largely See also: Indians
.
The See also: surface consists of a narrow coastal zone where tropical conditions prevail, a broad See also: belt of mountainous country covered by the ranges of the Sierra Madre Occidental and their intervening valleys where See also: oak and See also: pine forests are to be found, and an intervening zone among the foothills of the Sierra Madre up to an See also: elevation of 2000 ft., where the conditions are subtropical
.
The state is traversed by numerous streams, the largest of which have broad valleys among the foothills
.
The largest of these are the Culiacan, Fuerte and Sinaloa, the last two having See also: short navigable courses across the lowlands
.
Rain is plentiful everywhere, except in the extreme See also: north, where the conditions are arid
.
The See also: climate of the low-lying coast lands is hot and malarious, but in the mountains it is cool and healthy
.
Cereals and mezcal are produced on the uplands, and See also: sugar, See also: rum, See also: coffee, See also: tobacco. See also: grape See also: spirits and fruit in the See also: lower zones
.
There are excellent See also: cotton lands in the state and the production of this See also: staple was largely See also: developed during the See also: American See also: Civil War, but it has since declined
.
Grazing receives considerable See also: attention in the uplands, where the temperature is favourable and the pasture-age See also: good, and hides are largely exported
.
See also: Mining, however, is the chief industry, Sinaloa being one of the richest See also: mineral-producing states in the republic
.
Gold, See also: silver, copper, iron and See also: lead are found
.
There are also See also: salt deposits and mineral springs
.
The best-known silver mines are the See also: Rosario, from which about $9o,000,000 had been extracted up to the last See also: decade of the 19th century, and the Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe de los Reyes, discovered early in the 19th century and yielding over $85,000,000 before its close
.
The See also: forest products of the state include See also: rubber, resins, See also: cabinet and dye-woods, deerskins, orchilla and ixtle fibre
.
Up to the beginning of the zoth century Sinaloa had only one short railway, which connected Culiacan with its See also: port Altata
.
Since then the Mexican branch of the (American) See also: Southern Pacific railway from Nogales to See also: Guaymas has been extended S.E. along the coast
.
Sinaloa has excellent natural harbours, only two of which—Mazatlan and Altata—are much used
.
The bays of Agiobampo and Topolobampo are prospective railway terminals with See also: fine harbours
.
The capital of the state is Culiacan Rosales (commonly called Culiacan), on the Culiacan See also: river 39 M. from its port, Altata, at the mouth of the same river, with which it is connected by See also: rail
.
It is a well-built See also: town, with some thriving manufactures, including cotton goods, cigarettes, See also: liqueurs, &c
.
It is the see of a See also: bishop and has a fine See also: cathedral
.
Culiacan (pop. in 1900, 10,380) is the distributing centre for a large See also: district between Guaymas and See also: Mazatlan
.
The most important town is Mazatlan, one of the leading ports of Mexico on the Pacific coast, and the commercial centre for S
.
Sinaloa and N
.
Durango
.
Other towns are Mocorito (pop
.
9971 in 1895), Sinaloa and Fuerte, all in the N. of the state, Rosario (pop
.
8448 in 1900), and See also: San Ignacio in the S
.
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