Choya, Argentina

Choya is a village and municipality in the Andalgalá Department of Catamarca Province in northwestern Argentina.[1] The town is located on National Route 47.

Choya
Municipality and village
27°52′21″S 66°38′28″W
Coordinates: 27°52′21″S 66°38′28″W
Country Argentina
ProvinceCatamarca Province

History

Early mentions of Choya exist in colonial Spanish records. In 1660, Alonso Mercado y Villacorta used his position as Governor of Rio de la Plata to distributed management responsibilities regarding the native peoples in the Andalgalá valley to three trustees, including Gregorio de Villagra. Several families of native Ingamana people were installed in Choya in 1674.[2]

National Route 63 was established in the 20th century, connecting the town of Capillitas to the city of Andalgalá via 104 kilometres of unpaved road, with Choya as one of the primary stops on the highway. In 1980, National Decree 1595 of 1979 went into effect, renaming National Route 63 to National Route 47, the name by which it is now known.

From March 1990 to January 1991, a survey on genomic variation amongst gray leaf-eared mice collected specimens from the area in and around Choya.[3]

gollark: Did you READ the SCP?
gollark: You cannot SUMMON "big narf".
gollark: > Merely adding the phrase “BIG NARF” to the description of an upcoming event does not cause its cancellation, in significant tests by GCN-12 to date. Only additions of the phrase “BIG NARF” spontaneously by no observed mechanism or party appear to trigger SCP-2939. The phrase “BIG NARF,” then, is currently considered to be a ‘calling card’ for the events rather than a self-propagating memetic hazard in and of itself.
gollark: > Description: SCP-2339 is the collective designation for an anomalously large Bombus terrestris (buff-tailed bumblebee) nest and the bees residing within. SCP-2339-1 is the nest itself, measuring nearly 32m across. In comparison, a standard European bumblebee nest has a maximum capacity of 400 bees, and is far smaller. Aside from its size, SCP-2339-1 shows no other anomalous properties.
gollark: That is not 2339, though. I checked.

References

  1. Ministerio del Interior (in Spanish)
  2. Bickham, John W.; Braun, Janet K.; Mares, Michael A.; Ramirez, Peter B. (27 February 2001). "Geographic Variation in Genome Size of Graomys Griseoflavus (Rodentia: Muridae)". Journal of Mammalogy. 82 (1): 102–108. doi:10.1644/1545-1542(2001)082<0102:GVIGSO>2.0.CO;2. Retrieved 20 November 2016.


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