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  2. Agriculture in Costa Rica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agriculture_in_Costa_Rica

    The rolling mountains and dense jungles were full of biologic diversity but eventually the original belief that Costa Rica was a gold rich country was proved to be wrong. During the 19th century, coffee and banana cultivation brought some wealth to Costa Rica which resulted in class differentiation.

  3. History of Costa Rica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Costa_Rica

    Typical settlement of the Diquis indigenous people before the arrival of Columbus.. The first indigenous peoples of Costa Rica were hunters and gatherers, and when the Spanish conquerors arrived, Costa Rica was divided in two distinct cultural areas due to its geographical location in the Intermediate Area, between Mesoamerican and the Andean cultures, with influences of both cultures.

  4. National Archives of Costa Rica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../National_Archives_of_Costa_Rica

    The National Archives of Costa Rica (Spanish: Archivo Nacional de Costa Rica) is a decentralized institution of the Ministry of Culture and Youth. It is the governing body of the National Archival System, which manages Costa Rica's documentary heritage and collaborates in the control of the country's notarial activities. Its goals are to ...

  5. Diquis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diquis

    The Diquis culture (sometimes spelled Diquís) was a pre-Columbian indigenous culture of Costa Rica that flourished from AD 700 to 1530. [1] The word "diquís" means "great waters" or "great river" in the Boruca language. [1] The Diquis formed part of the Greater Chiriqui culture that spanned from southern Costa Rica to western Panama. [2]

  6. Conservation in Costa Rica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservation_in_Costa_Rica

    The agricultural model adopted by coffee growers in Costa Rica was of small family owned farms known as cafeteras, and they strove to be responsible stewards of the land. This approach was in stark contrast to the coffee monoculture that would've developed by adopting a purely capitalistic ideology.

  7. Pre-Columbian history of Costa Rica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pre-Columbian_history_of...

    The pre-Columbian history of Costa Rica extends from the establishment of the first settlers until the arrival of Christopher Columbus to the Americas. Archaeological evidence allows us to date the arrival of the first humans to Costa Rica to between 7000 and 10,000 BC. By the second millennium BC sedentary farming communities already existed.

  8. Costa Rican oxcarts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Costa_Rican_oxcarts

    World's largest oxcart on display in Costa Rica. Costa Rican oxcarts, called carretas in Spanish, are a large part of Costa Rican history. They allowed for the expansion and increase of exports of many goods including Costa Rica's main export, coffee. It also is a huge part of Costa Rican culture today. The oxcarts are considered one of Costa ...

  9. Kingdom of Nicoya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Nicoya

    Nicoyan pottery. Mesoamerican-style Nicoyan pottery at the Los Angeles Art Museum. Ceremonial Nicoyan metate. The Kingdom of Nicoya (from Nahuatl: Nekok Yaotl), also called Cacicazgo or Lordship of Nicoya, was an indigenous nation that comprised much of the territory of the current Guanacaste Province, in the North Pacific of Costa Rica.