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Itaqui is a municipality in Brazil, located in the southwestern part of the state of Rio Grande do Sul, close to the Argentinian border, between Uruguaiana and São Borja. It sits at a mean altitude of 57 meters (187 ft), by the Uruguay River .
Port of Itaqui is a Brazilian port located in the city of São Luís, Maranhão. [1] It is not to be confused with the city of Itaqui, in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, near the border with Argentina. The main cargoes include aluminum ingots and bars, pig iron, general, dry and liquid bulk cargoes, soybean and copper.
Itaguaí (Portuguese pronunciation:) is a municipality located in the Brazilian state of Rio de Janeiro and contains several important iron ore loading ports of the world including Ilha Guaiba. [3] Its population was 134,819 in 2020 and its area is 273 km 2. [4]
Inah Canabarro Lucas, a 116-year-old nun from Brazil, has become the world's oldest person. ... She worked in Itaqui for over a decade, beginning in February 1949, before returning to Santana do ...
The North-South Railway connects with the Carajás Railway in Açailândia (MA), which leads to the port of Itaqui.Departing from Porto Franco (MA), it will connect with the Transnordestina Railway, currently under construction by Transnordestina Logística S.A., after implementation of the line to Eliseu Martins (PI), which will provide alternative access to the ports of Suape (PE) and Pecém ...
Jesus Cleiton Pereira da Silva (born 20 January 1973), better known as Itaqui, is a Brazilian former professional footballer and manager, who played as a right back.
Itaqui is a municipality in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Itaqui may also refer to: Porto do Itaqui, port in São Luís, Maranhão, Brazil; Itaqui (footballer, born 1973), Jesus Cleiton Pereira da Silva, Brazilian football right-back; Itaqui (footballer, born 1988), Odacir Pereira da Silva, Brazilian football left-back
The reserve includes parts of the municipalities of Itaqui and Maçambara. [2] It covers part of one of the last wetland areas of Rio Grande do Sul and is important for several endangered species. There was an ongoing struggle to make the reserve a reality. [1] Implementation only began in 2001.