Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
XHUAA-TDT, virtual channel 19 (UHF digital channel 22), is a Las Estrellas television station in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico, whose over-the-air signal also covers the San Diego–Tijuana region across the Mexico–United States border. The station is owned by the TelevisaUnivision.
Cadena Tres I, S.A. de C.V. 23 6 XETV-TDT: Tijuana: Canal 5 (16.1 Nu9ve) 200 kW Radio Televisión 15 11 XHCPDE-TDT: Tijuana: Canal Once (Once Niñas y Niños) 78.96 kW Instituto Politécnico Nacional 32 12 XEWT-TDT: Tijuana: Televisa Regional 200 kW Televisora de Occidente 9 XHCPAT-TDT: Tijuana: Sistema Público de Radiodifusión del Estado ...
XEWT-TDT (channel 12), informally called Tu Canal ("Your Channel"), is a television station in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico, owned by TelevisaUnivision.XEWT's over-the-air signal also covers the San Diego–Tijuana region across the Mexico–United States border (and holds cable coverage in San Diego on Cox systems).
The Tijuana metropolitan area, and in Spanish the Zona Metropolitana de Tijuana, is located by the Pacific Ocean in Mexico. The 2010 census placed the Tijuana metropolitan area as the fifth largest city by population in the country with 1,751,302 people.
The area of the municipality of Tijuana is 879.2 km² (339.46 sq mi); the municipality includes part of the Coronado Islands, located off the coast of the municipality in the Pacific Ocean. The city of Tijuana lies just south of San Diego, California. The adjacent city and former borough of Tijuana is Rosarito Beach.
Large hills in Tijuana include the Cerro Colorado and the Cerro de las Abejas. The city is located near the terminus of the Tijuana River and within the Tijuana River Basin. The Tijuana River is an intermittent river , 195 km (121 mi) long, on the Pacific coast of northern Baja California in Mexico and Southern California in the United States.
Tijuana's red light district itself encompasses just a couple of blocks within Zona Norte. The unofficial boundaries of the red light district extend from Avenida Revolución to Av. Miguel F. Martinez, east to west, and from Baja California to Calle Primera, north to south.
Cottonwood Creek is joined by the Tecate Creek before it enters Mexico where it is known as the Arroyo de Alamar from the point where it enters Mexico to its confluence with the larger tributary, the Arroyo de las Palmas, that forms the headwaters of the Tijuana River within the city. The Arroyo de las Palmas, the main tributary of the Tijuana ...