Atlantic City Paper - Mining Districts of Colombia (Discussion, 803 ; see also p. 591)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Henry G. Granger Edward B. Treville
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
55
File Size:
2939 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1899

Abstract

The Republic of Colombia is the northernmost country of South America. Its northern coast line exteilds from the frontier of Costa Rica to that of Venezuela, on the Caribbean Sea. On the west it fronts on the Pacific Ocean, along the Panama Isthmus, and down to Ecuador. It is bounded on the south by Ecuador, Peru and Brazil, which latter country with Venezuela form its boundaries on the east. Its area exceeds 500,000 square miles. It is deemed unnecessary to give here a map of the country. Fig. 1, a map of the department of Antioquia, studied in connection with a good modern general map of Colombia, will explain itself. Fig. 1 contains also some of the region of the Cauca valley, described in this paper. Access.—The interior of Colombia is reached through the ports of Sabanilla and Cartagena on the Caribbean Sea, each of which places is connected with the Magdalena river by a short narrow-gauge railroad, running respectively to Barranquilla and Calamar. From these points lines of river-steamers serve the ports of the upper Magdalena, which they reach in journeys of a week to ten days. After leaving the steamer, a short railroad journey, followed by a long and tedious mule-ride, reaches the cities of Bogota and Medellin. Quibdo, at the head of the navigation of the Atrato, and its most important town, is connected by steamer-service with Cartagena, by canoe-routes with the various districts of the Choco, and by mule-road, at present well-nigh impassable, with the heart of Antioquia. On the western coast the port of Tumaco is a starting-point for canoe- and mule-travel to the southern part of the department of Cauca, while Buenaventura is the port of the central section of the valley of the Cauca,
Citation

APA: Henry G. Granger Edward B. Treville  (1899)  Atlantic City Paper - Mining Districts of Colombia (Discussion, 803 ; see also p. 591)

MLA: Henry G. Granger Edward B. Treville Atlantic City Paper - Mining Districts of Colombia (Discussion, 803 ; see also p. 591). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1899.

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