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Junín
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Junín

Department in the central highlands of Peru; area 44,197 km/17,064 sq mi; population (1996) 1,133,183. Junín is subdivided into seven provinces, the easternmost of which extends into the tropical valleys of the upper Amazon river system. The capital is Huancayo. The department is also crossed by the Cordillera Central and the Cordillera Occidental of the Andes, and contains vast tracts of windswept plateau, where sheep and alpacas are grazed. Potatoes and barley are intensively cultivated in the higher parts, and coffee, timber, and tropical fruits come from the hot Chanchamayo and Satipo areas. Some of Peru's most important mines are in Junín, notably those at Casapalca and Morococha. Lead, zinc, copper, bismuth, tungsten, antimony, and many other minerals are extracted. There is a smelting complex at La Oroya.

The world's highest station on a standard-gauge railway (4,818 m/15,807 ft) is situated in Juníin, at La Cima (Ticlio) on the Peruvian Central Railway.



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Caused by the Junin virus, Argentine hemorrhagic fever affects primarily adult male agricultural workers, mainly during the harvest season (14).
Victories at Junin (hoo-NEEN) and Ayacucho (eye-ah-KOO-cho) in 1824 broke Peru free of Spain's colonial grip.
She finds that, in three cases (Sierra Norte de Puebla, Morelos in Mexico, and Junin in Peru), the peasants did come up with their own ideas about who should participate in their country whereas in one region (Cajamarca, Peru) a peasant-defined national project did not emerge.
 
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