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  2. Salviati Planisphere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salviati_Planisphere

    The Salviati Planisphere. The Salviati Planisphere is a world map showing the Spanish view of the Earth's surface at the time of the map's creation, c. 1525, and includes the eastern coasts of North and South America and the Straits of Magellan.

  3. Map of Juan de la Cosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map_of_Juan_de_la_Cosa

    Juan de la Cosa's map is a manuscript nautical chart of the world drawn on two joined sheets of parchment sewn onto a canvas backing. It measures 96 cm high by 183 cm wide. A legend written in Spanish at the western edge of the map translates as "Juan de la Cosa made this (map) in the port of Santa Maria in the year 1500".

  4. Hierve el Agua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierve_el_Agua

    Hierve el Aqua (Spanish for "the water boils") is a set of natural travertine rock formations in San Lorenzo Albarradas, Oaxaca, Mexico that resemble cascades of water. [1] [2] The site is located about 70 km east of Oaxaca City, [3] and consists of two rock shelves or cliffs which rise between fifty and ninety metres from the valley below, from which extend nearly white rock formations which ...

  5. Continental shelf of Chile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continental_Shelf_of_Chile

    Continental shelf of Chile in the Southern Zone Sea. According to the principle that "the coastal State exercises over the continental shelf sovereign rights," [13] the continental shelf of Continental Chile encompasses the entirety of its territorial sea and its Exclusive Economic Zone, except for the 200 nautical miles projected from the Diego Ramírez Islands in the Southern Zone Sea, which ...

  6. Ojos de Agua, El Salvador - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ojos_de_Agua,_El_Salvador

    Ojos de Agua is a municipality in the Chalatenango department of El Salvador. It is about 1700 feet (or about 1.1 kilometers) from the border of Honduras and El Salvador, which is formed by the Rio Sumpul .

  7. Volcán de Agua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcán_de_Agua

    Volcán de Agua (also known as Junajpú by Maya) is an extinct stratovolcano located in the departments of Sacatepéquez and Escuintla in Guatemala. At 3,760 m (12,340 ft) , Agua Volcano towers more than 3,500 m (11,500 ft) above the Pacific coastal plain to the south and 2,000 m (6,600 ft) above the Guatemalan Highlands to the north.

  8. Cayo de Agua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cayo_de_Agua

    Cayo de Agua [1] [2] (in English literally Water Key) is the name of an island in the eastern Caribbean Sea [3] that geographically belongs to the Los Roques Archipelago [4] [5] and is administratively organized as part of the Federal Dependencies, Venezuela, [6] in addition to being part of the National Park of the same name and the Miranda Island Territory, the name of this key has its ...

  9. Coatzacoalcos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coatzacoalcos

    Sandoval named it Villa del Espíritu Santo. [4] San Martín Tuxtla is an active volcano lying northwest of Coatzcoalcos in the Sierra de los Tuxtlas. It erupted in 1664, in May 1793 with large ash falls and lava flows, and most recently in 1796. [5] The town was elevated to the category of port in 1825 and the name was changed to Coatzacoalcos ...