Humid Pampa

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The Humid Pampa (Spanish: Pampa Húmeda) is an extensive region of flat, fertile grassland of loessic origin in Argentina. It has a precipitation average of 900 mm per year, in contrast with the other part of the Pampas, the Dry Pampa.

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[edit] Setting

Except for a few low hills near the Paraná and Río de la Plata rivers, the terrain is flatland. It covers Buenos Aires Province almost completely, the centre and south of Santa Fe Province, most of Córdoba Province, and the eastern third of La Pampa Province, totalling at least 600,000 km².

The Uruguayan savanna, which lies east of these rivers in Entre Ríos Province of Argentina, Uruguay and the south of Brazil, is sometimes considered part of the Humid Pampa. The Uruguayan savanna is not as flat as the named aforementioned areas.

The flatlands are also interrupted by formations of low hills in a few places in the west, namely near Balcarce, Olavarría, Tandil and, to the south, the higher system of the Sierra de la Ventana near Bahía Blanca. Finally, there are also some dunes at the Atlantic coast, such as at the city of Banderaló.

[edit] Climate

The area is characterised by four distinct seasons. The weather is usually temperate, very humid, and snowfalls are rare. The summer can be extremely humid and hot. Its natural vegetation comprises meadows of high grass with isolated forests (locally referred to as montes) of algarrobos, talas and chanares, which used to be common in areas near the main rivers but have been mostly cut down during the 20th century.

The weather of the area is similar to that of European areas with natural dense forest of deciduous trees, which is, however, absent from the Humid Pampa because the soil is too compact and not airy enough to favour the growth of large trees.

[edit] Flora

The Humid Pampa is characterized by medium-height grassland, with both perennial and annual grasses with scattered herbs and shrubs. The grasslands are interspersed with areas of dry woodland as well as freshwater and saltwater wetlands and lagoons.

The ombú, considered an emblem of the Humid Pampa (and not a proper tree but a herb), grows naturally north of the Río de la Plata and east of the Paraná, seldom south of the Río de la Plata, and never south of the Salado. Before the introduction of cattle, horses and sheep by the Spaniards on the 16th century, the region was covered by hard grass, but the animals' grazing facilitated the growth of softer, greener grass.

[edit] Population

Due to the important immigration to Argentina in the second half of the 19th century and first decades of the 20th, and because the weather allowed for two annual harvests, the lands started being heavily used for agriculture, what made Argentina a major agricultural producer (the self-styled "Granary of the World"). Being fertile and close to the Atlantic Ocean, the Humid Pampa was one of the preferred destinations of millions of immigrants, who were mostly Italian and Spanish, and who mixed with the gauchos and criollos.

The lands of the region were taken care of by the gauchos for centuries, and the region was the epicentre of their culture, including their music and dances.

Areas that were kept for breeding cattle and sheep extensively stayed under the control of large estates' owners, and in lesser number to medium size estates, and in some cases also smaller farms, known as chacras (their owners being chacareros or chacreros).

The urban population of Argentina (80% of its 38.6 million inhabitants as estimated for 2005) is concentrated today in cities within the Humid Pampa (the capital Buenos Aires, Córdoba and Rosario).

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