Online Encyclopedia

TABASCO

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 323 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TABASCO  , a

state of Mexico, bounded N. by the Gulf of Mexico, E. by the state of Campeche and Guatemala, S. by Guatemala and
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Chiapas, and W. by Vera Cruz .
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Area 10,072 sq. m . Pop . (1900) 159,834 . The
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surface is generally low and flat, largely covered with lagoons, watercourses and swamps . In the S. and S.E. there is an area belonging to the rough higher formation of Chiapas . Dense forests cover the whole region, and there are valuable
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fine woods and dye-woods . There are several large lagoons on the coast, two of which are called Sant'
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Ana and Tupilco bays . Two large rivers, the Grijalva and Usumacinta,
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traverse its territory . The Grijalva, also called Tabasco, the upper course of which is known as the Chiapas, has its most distant
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sources in western Guatemala and flows N.W. across Chiapas to the frontier of Oaxaca, thence N. to the frontier of Tabasco, and thence N.E. to the coast; it is navigable for 93 M . The Usumacinta likewise has its sources in western Guatemala . It forms the boundary between Guatemala and Chiapas until the frontier of Tabasco is reached, where its N.W. course turns to the N. and then N.W. to a junction with the Grijalva—the two rivers having a
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common outlet .

The Usumacinta, including its

head streams, is about 5oo m. long; excluding them about 330 M. long; for about 270 M. it is navigable, for about 18o m. for large steamers . There are no
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railways and no good roads, and these rivers and the navigable channels of the Cuxcuchopa, Soledad, Cocohital, Tular, and Tortuguero, are the
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principal
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practical thoroughfares in the state . The capital is
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San Juan Bautista (pop., 1900, 10,548), formerly called
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Villa Hermosa, on the Grijalva
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river, about 7o m. above its mouth . The next most important
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town is Frontera (pop., 1895, 6794), a
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port 3 M. within the mouth of the Grijalva .

End of Article: TABASCO
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