Nicaro-Levisa

Nicaro-Levisa
(Nicaro / Levisa / Levisa-Nicaro)
Village

Location of Nicaro and Levisa within Holguín Province

Location of Nicaro-Levisa in Cuba

Coordinates: 20°40′44.4″N 75°32′29.76″W / 20.679000°N 75.5416000°W / 20.679000; -75.5416000Coordinates: 20°40′44.4″N 75°32′29.76″W / 20.679000°N 75.5416000°W / 20.679000; -75.5416000
Country  Cuba
Province Holguín
Municipality Mayarí
Elevation 8 m (26 ft)
Population (2011)
  Total 20,000
Time zone EST (UTC-5)
Area code(s) +53-24[1]

Nicaro-Levisa,[2] also Levisa-Nicaro, is a Cuban town and consejo popular ("people's council", i.e. hamlet) of the municipality of Mayarí, in Holguín Province, formed by the settlements of Nicaro and Levisa. With a population of about 20,000, it is the most populated village in the municipality after Mayarí.

History

Nicaro was originally named Lengua de Pajaro, which translated into English means "bird's tongue", due to the shape of its peninsula, as viewed from an air ride.

Geography

Located on Levisa Bay just below Cayo Saetía, and crossed by the River Levisa, Nicaro-Levisa is 10 km far from Mayarí, 80 from Moa and about 100 from Holguín. The town is composed by the settlements of Nicaro (20°42′15″N 75°32′57″W / 20.7043°N 75.5493°W / 20.7043; -75.5493) and Levisa (20°39′54″N 75°32′31″W / 20.6650°N 75.5419°W / 20.6650; -75.5419). Nicaro lies on a peninsula in the middle of the bay and Levisa more in the inland, very close to the villages of La Italiana and El Purio. The town is surrounded by the Sierra Cristal mountains, part of the Nipe-Sagua-Baracoa range.

Transport

The principal road serving the town is the national road 123 (Carretera de Mayarí) that links Cueto with Baracoa, at the eastern end of the Carretera Central. It counts a railway serving the open mine named "Mina Martí" (for nickel and cobalt exploitation),[3] and the nickel plant "Comandante René Ramos Latour",[4][5] located near the airport. Nicaro Airport is a minor airfield located in front of Levisa Bay and the Port of Nicaro lies in the northernmost point of the peninsula.[6]

See also

References

Media related to Nicaro-Levisa at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.