Iruya

Iruya is a small town of population 1,070 in northwestern Argentina. It is located in the Salta Province of northwestern Argentina, and is the capital of the Iruya Department.

Iruya
View of Iruya.
Location of Iruya in Argentina.
Coordinates: 22.791585°S 65.216361°W / -22.791585; -65.216361
Founded1753
Elevation
2,780 m (9,120 ft)
Population
 (2010)
  Total1,523
  Density1.66/km2 (4.3/sq mi)

Overview

Located in the altiplano region along the Iruya River, Iruya sits nestled against the mountainside at an elevation of 2,780 meters (9,120 feet). It is located over 300 kilometers (190 mi) from the province capital of Salta. There is no direct road connection to the rest of the Salta province and access is through a road to the adjacent Jujuy province, a 50 km (31 mi) portion of which is unpaved.[1] Nonetheless, the town is popular with tourists for its scenic location and townscape and friendly locals.[2] 8 km north of Iruya there is the village of San Isidro, 7 km north there is the village of San Juan, 6 km south there is the village of Pueblo Viejo.

Iruya's name is derived from the Quechua language, meaning "abundance of straw".[3]

History

Iruya was officially founded in 1753, but the first inhabitants settled here around 100 years earlier. They were mainly aboriginals of which the oldest roots go back to the Ocloyas, a people belonging to the ethnic group of the Kolla who stem from the Kollasuyo, which used to be one of the four regions of the Inca empire.[4]

Iruya's church was built in 1690.[5]

gollark: I don't think "what if we autogenerated programs" is a hugely original idea. It's just very hard.
gollark: There's a neat easy thing to train GPT-2 instances. I did that with my discord messages.
gollark: Those are used for inferencing, not training, and stuff has worked fine for ages without them.
gollark: Not really.
gollark: And modern AI stuff mostly just uses lots of high-VRAM GPUs.

See also

References

  1. "Salta: Iruya". Enjoy Travel Argentina. Enjoy Corporation SA. 2009. Retrieved February 10, 2009.
  2. Ingledew, Roberto. "Off the Beaten Track to Iruya". Gosouthamerica.about.com. About.com. Retrieved February 10, 2009.
  3. http://www.iruyaonline.com/
  4. http://www.iruyaonline.com/iruya-historia.html
  5. https://www.facebook.com/Flicts/


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