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Jujuy

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Jujuy

Capital of the province of the same name in the far northwest of Argentina; population (1996) 181,318. After earlier settlements at the site had been destroyed by Indians, the present city was founded in 1593. It stands at an altitude of 1,200 m/3,937 ft among heavily forested mountains. Jujuy is on the railway line from Buenos Aires, which terminates at La Quiaca on the Bolivian border.

During the wars of liberation from Spanish rule in the early decades of the 19th century, Jujuy was destroyed by republican troops to prevent it from falling to advancing Spanish forces. The city has several museums and an imposing cathedral with a notable gilded wooden pulpit.

Jujuy

Province in the far northwest of Argentina, adjoining Chile in the west and Bolivia in the north; area 53,219 sq km/20,548 sq mi; population (1996) 512,329; capital Jujuy. In the western region of Jujuy lie the peaks of the Andes, while the rest of the province is situated in the altiplano (high plateau), which has an average altitude of over 2,000 m/6,500 ft. This area of the province is interspersed with mountain ranges and valleys. Rainfall is sparse, but crops are grown in the valleys and cattle and sheep are farmed in the hills. Sugar cane is an important cash crop. Iron ore is the main mineral found here, but zinc, lead, tin, gold, and silver are also extracted on a small scale. During the colonial era, Jujuy was an important mining area.



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Evidence of rickettsial spotted fever and ehrlichial infections in a subtropical territory of Jujuy, Argentina.
This factor is the driving force behind the FCTC and two other cross-border railway projects, one crossing in the south at Neuquen and the other to the north at Jujuy.
Television images showed fans of the second-division club Talleres waving the flags ahead of the team's match Thursday against rival Gimnasia de Jujuy in the central city of Cordoba.
 
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