Maule Region

The Maule Region (Spanish: Región del Maule, pronounced [ˈmawle]) is one of Chile's 16 first order administrative divisions. Its capital is Talca. The region derives its name from the Maule River which, running westward from the Andes, bisects the region and spans a basin of about 20,600 km2. The Maule river is of considerable historic interest because, among other reasons, it marked the southern limits of the Inca Empire.

Maule Region

Región del Maule
Colbún Lake
Flag
Coat of arms
Map of Maule Region
Coordinates: 35°26′S 71°40′W
Country Chile
CapitalTalca
ProvincesCuricó, Talca, Linares, Cauquenes
Government
  IntendantPablo Milad Abusleme (Evopoli)
Area
  Total30,296.1 km2 (11,697.4 sq mi)
Area rank9
Lowest elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Population
 (2017 census)[1]
  Total1,033,197
  Rank4
  Density34/km2 (88/sq mi)
ISO 3166 codeCL-ML
HDI (2017)0.766[2]
high
WebsiteOfficial website (in Spanish)

Geography and ecology

The region covers an area of 30,296 km2 (11,697 sq mi) and is bordered on the west by the Pacific Ocean; on the east by the Argentina; on the north by the O'Higgins Region, and on the south by the Ñuble Region. There are a number of flora and fauna species present in Maule. For example, the endangered Chilean Wine Palm (Jubaea chilensis) is found in a very limited distribution that includes the Maule Region.[3] The limited distribution Nothofagus allesandri is also found in the region.[4]

Demography

According to the 2017 census, the population of the region was 1,033,197. With one third of its population living in rural areas, Maule has a greater proportion of rural inhabitants than any other region of Chile. Its most populated city is the regional capital, Talca, with 235,000 inhabitants, followed by Curicó (120,700) and Linares (127,000). Other important cities are: Constitución (50,914), Parral (47,000), Cauquenes (43,000), Molina (42,000) and San Javier (40,000).

Population density

The average density of the Maule Region is 34.1 inhabitants per km2, with less dense areas towards the mountains, and dense areas in the central valley.

Composition by age and sex

According to the composition pyramid of the population of the Region, those younger than fifteen years old are becoming greater in number than the adult population. The annual growth rate of the population of the Maule Region is 1.06%; this comparatively low figure arises from the low birth rate in the Region. The average life expectancy in the Region is 76.3 years.

Economy

Forestry and agriculture, led by wine grape plantations, are the main economic activities. The Maule region is Chile's leading wine-making region, producing 50% of all the country's fine export wines, and a number of the largest vineyards are located here. Owing to its high concentration of vineyards, the Curicó valley, which means "black water" in Mapudungun – is considered the core of Chile's wine industry. Wine-making is a traditional activity, some vineyards dating back to 1830. The increased wine-growing area is matched by the development of the industry's infrastructure, technology, and equipment.

In addition to wine, two export-oriented agricultural items have emerged dynamically: fruit, vegetables and flowers.

Electricity, gas and water are the second most important economic activity. The Maule River feeds five hydroelectric power plants, including the Colbún-Machicura complex.

Political divisions

The 4 provinces of the Maule Region are divided into 30 communes.

Political and administrative divisions of Maule Region, Chile
Province Area in km2 Population Capital Communes
Cauquenes 3,027 57,088 Cauquenes
Curicó 7,281 244,053 Curicó
Linares 10,050 253,990 Linares
Talca 9,961 352,966 Talca

History

Heritage

The Maule Region has produced a remarkable number of famous men and women, in particular writers and poets but also, statesmen and presidents, scientists and naturalists, churchmen, musicians and folklorists, journalists and historians. Thus, the Maule river, the long and wide artery that runs through the region, has been considered Chile's literary river par excellence. Many novels and short stories have had the river as their main background or protagonist. Several anthologies, author's dictionaries and essays have given their account of the cultural wealth of the region.

The region boasts of many small towns and villages with well-preserved colonial rural architecture, both in the religious as well as the civil fields. The Talca and Linares dioceses (the two Roman Catholic dioceses in the Maule region) have several parish churches of particular beauty and architectural and historic value.

27 February 2010 earthquake and aftermath

At 03:34 local time (06:34 UTC), an 8.8 magnitude earthquake occurred off the Maule coast approximately 11 km (7 mi) southwest of Curanipe and 100 km (62 mi) north-northeast of Chile's second largest city, Concepción.[5] The earthquake lasted nearly four minutes,[6][7] severely affected the region through its action and the resultant tsunami. Cauquenes was damaged by the earthquake.[8] Constitución was damaged by the earthquake and subsequent tsunami. Restoring power in both cities in the immediate aftermath was impossible because of damage from the tsunami.[8]

Politics

Regional Intendant (Intendente)

  • Rodrigo Galilea Vial

Provincial Governors

Members of Parliament (Diputados)

The Maule Region is divided into five parliamentary districts. Each one of these returns two members of parliament or deputies.

The table shows the district number, the municipalities encompassed in each district and the names (and party) of the respective members of parliament.

District numberMunicipalities encompassed in the districtMembers of Parliament (Political party)
36Curicó, Teno, Romeral, Molina, Sagrada Familia, Hualañé, Licantén, Vichuquén, RaucoRoberto León (PDC), Celso Morales (UDI)
37TalcaGermán Verdugo (RN), Sergio Aguiló (PS)
38Curepto, Constitución, Empedrado, Pencahue, Maule, San Clemente, Pelarco, Río Claro, San RafaelPablo Lorenzini (PDC), Pedro Pablo Álvarez-Salamanca (RN)
39Linares, Colbún, San Javier, Villa Alegre, Yerbas BuenasRomilio Gutiérrez (UDI), Jorge Tarud (PPD)
40Longaví, Retiro, Parral, Cauquenes, Pelluhue, ChancoGuillermo Ceroni (PPD), Ignacio Urrutia (UDI)

Senators (Senadores)

The Maule Region is divided into two senatorial circumscriptions. One (Circumscription North) is composed of the provinces of Curicó and Talca and the other by the provinces of Linares and Cauquenes. Thus, senatorial circumscription North encompasses parliamentary districts 36, 37 and 38, and senatorial circumscription South encompasses parliamentary districts 39 and 40. Each circumscription elects two senators.

The table shows the circumscription name, the municipalities encompassed in each district and the names (and party) of the respective senators.

Circumscription number and nameMunicipalities encompassed in the CircumscriptionMembers of Parliament (Political party)
(10) Región del Maule (Norte)Curicó, Teno, Romeral, Molina, Sagrada Familia, Hualañé, Licantén, Vichuquén, Rauco, Talca, Curepto, Constitución, Empedrado, Pencahue, Maule, San Clemente, Pelarco, Río Claro, San RafaelAndrés Zaldívar (PDC), Juan Antonio Coloma Correa (UDI)
(11) Región del Maule (Sur)Linares, Colbún, San Javier, Villa Alegre, Yerbas Buenas, Longaví, Retiro, Parral, Cauquenes, Pelluhue, ChancoXimena Rincón (PDC), Hernán Larraín (UDI)
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gollark: Well, some are official TJ09 stuff, but others are not.

See also

References

Citations

  1. "Maule Region". Government of Chile Foreign Investment Committee. Retrieved 13 March 2010.
  2. "Sub-national HDI - Area Database - Global Data Lab". hdi.globaldatalab.org. Retrieved 2018-09-13.
  3. C. Michael Hogan (2008)
  4. Julian Evans. 2001
  5. "Magnitude 8.8 – Offshore Maule, Chile". United States Geological Survey. February 27, 2010. Archived from the original on March 16, 2011. Retrieved February 27, 2010.
  6. "USGS Earthquake Details". United States Geological Survey. Archived from the original on March 1, 2010. Retrieved February 27, 2010.
  7. Patrick Sawer (February 27, 2010). "Huge earthquake hits Chile". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved February 27, 2010.
  8. Cowley, Matthew (2 March 2010). "Chile Power Firms: Slow Process Restoring Power In Quake Zones". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 3 March 2010.

Sources

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