Brazil is the fifth largest country in the
world, behind Russia, Canada, China, and the U.S.A., with an area of eight
and a half million square kilometers. There are around 155
million Brazilians, but there must be thousands of nameless
tramps who live and die in the country without ever having been registered
officially.
The
official language is Portuguese, albeit the Brazilian version of this
language. Brazilian Portuguese sounds more musical than the original
European version. The official currency of Brazil is the REAL
and is valued basically on par with the U.S. dollar, although
the exchange rate tends to vary. Mr.
Fernando Henrique Cardoso was elected president, by a democratic
presidential election, on October 3, 1994 by the widest popular margin in
a Brazilian election since 1945. Brazil is a Federal Republic consisting of 26 states and a Federal
District, where Brasilia, the country's capital, is located.
The Brazilian summer
lasts from
December to February, a period frequently bringing stifling humidity to
the far south. Brief rain showers are common, given Brazil's tropical
climate, but the dry interior has only a few months of heavy rainfall a
year. Of course, the Amazon Basin is the wettest area, with damp, moist
temperatures averaging 27 C. Brazil's winter
lasts from June to August, with temperatures between 13°C
and 18°C, but it only gets really cold south of Rio.
Some of the most
important cities and states are : 26 states (estados in Portuguese) and 1 federal district
(distrito federal); Acre, Alagoas, Amapa, Amazonas, Bahia, Ceara, Distrito
Federal*, Espirito Santo, Goias, Maranhao, Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do
Sul, Minas Gerais, Para, Paraiba, Parana, Pernambuco, Piaui, Rio de
Janeiro, Rio Grande do Norte, Rio Grande do Sul, Rondonia, Roraima, Santa
Catarina, Sao Paulo, Sergipe, Tocantins.Brazil has five distinctive regions: North, formed by the states of
Rondonia, Acre, Amazonas, Roraima, Para, Amapa and Tocantins States. This
region is responsible for 6% of Brazil's total GNP.
The basin of the Amazon
River and its tributaries covers almost half of Brazil's territory.
This region is one of the world's largest
rainforest ecologies. The ongoing exploitation of the rainforest has
brought with it that a large proportion
of this area has suffered the effects of modernization in recent years.
From the Amazon's mouth on the Pacific to Manaus, the region's bustling
main city, the river is heavily traveled, and
wildlife is scarce. Away
from the cities and the main course of the Amazon, however, smaller
tributaries lead past unspoiled habitat and traditional villages.
Brazil's population is concentrated
in the major cities of its coast, despite its vast expanse of
territory. The urban agglomerations of Rio de Janeiro and
Sao Paulo dominate the southern coast. Further north, towns such as
Salvador and João Pessoa retain the colonial atmosphere of the early
Portuguese settlers. The great interior, much of which is covered by the
rainforest basin of the Amazon, remains sparsely settled.
South of the Amazon region, the country's interior is dominated by the
Brazilian Shield, an expansive bedrock flat that is slowly falling victim
to the elements. The Mato Grosso, a smooth, grassy plain in Brazil's
center, slowly gives way to the Planalto, a low-rise plateau that extends
across the central and western regions. In the far west, along the border
with Paraguay and Bolivia, is the Pantanal, one of the most extensive
swamplands in the world.