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Argentina

Travel & Tourism
www.turismo.gov.ar
www.terra.ar
www.terra.com
www.lanic.utexas.edu/la/argentina
destinations.travelguide.com/Argentina
www.buenosaires.gov.ar
fodors.com/miniguides/buenos_aires@38
www.aerolinas.com.ar
www.aa2000.com.ar
www.argentinatravelnet.com
www.hostels.org.ar
www.hostelling-aaaj.org.ar
www.vivalaspampas.com
www.aca.org.ar
www.expatvillage.com

Politics & News
www.buenosairesherald.com
www.clarin.com
www.lanacion.com.ar
www.ambitoweb.com
www.onlinenewspapers.com/argentina.htm

Culture
www.fnartes.gov.ar
www.lamaga.com.ar
www.amerispan.com
www.el-libro.com.ar
www.tangodata.com.ar
www.avesargentinas.org.ar
www.afa.org.ar

History & Facts
www.dgpatrimonio.buenosaires.gov.ar
countryreports.org/Argentina
infoplease.com/ce6/world/A0804641.html

Economic
www.indec.mecon.ar
www.apertura.com

International Relations

Maps
www.igm.gov.ar
 


Travel Information from www.moon.com

Argentina Overview
Nestled where the South American continent tapers to its tip, pointing toward Antarctica, Argentina is a country of superlatives and extremes. In the region known as the Southern Cone for its shape on the map, it’s a geographical jewel even if it owes its very name—deriving from the Latin root for silver—to Spanish settlers’ misguided hopes of finding precious metals.

As the world’s eighth-largest country, slightly smaller than India, Argentina’s diversity can satisfy almost any interest. Its capital, Buenos Aires, is famous for the tango and has the highest international profile of any South American city. The first city on the continent to exceed a million inhabitants, its European-immigrant vitality has survived repeated crises to remain a cultural as well as political capital.

For some visitors, Buenos Aires alone is enough, but it’s also the port of entry to some of the greatest sights in the Americas. The Río de la Plata, which empties into the South Atlantic here, is longer than the Mississippi; to the west, the gaucho homeland of the flat green pampas stretches beyond the horizon. To the north, the legendary Iguazú Falls are half again the height of Niagara and nearly four times wider. Along the western border with Chile, higher than Denali in Alaska, the Andean summit of Cerro Aconcagua is “The Roof of the Americas.”

Among its staggering landscapes, Argentina counts ten UNESCO World Biosphere Reserves and seven World Heritage Sites, including Iguazú and the ruins-rich polychrome canyon of the Quebrada de Humahuaca, linked to the highlands of Peru and Bolivia. In the southern region of Patagonia, there’s the wildlife-packed Atlantic coastline of Península Valdés, the aboriginal rock art of Cueva de las Manos (Cave of Hands), and the Glaciar Moreno, a grinding river of ice that’s a feast for the eyes and the ears.

Argentine paleontologists have put the desert parks of Ischigualasto and Talampaya on the map with groundbreaking fossil research. Dinosaur-hunters have made other major advances both in the arid north, whose bright sedimentary landscapes recall the southwestern United States, and on the vast Patagonian steppes.

Península Valdés, for that matter, is only one of many wildlife reserves on a seemingly endless South Atlantic shoreline. Northernmost Patagonia’s forested lake district reminds visitors of the European Alps, and only New Zealand, Norway, and the Alaskan panhandle can match archipelagic Tierra del Fuego’s sub-Antarctic wildlands.

However, Argentina’s not all nature. In the shadow of Aconcagua, the Cuyo region is wine country, and Mendoza is one of South America’s most livable cities. The cities of Rosario and Córdoba—the latter’s colonial Jesuit heritage is also a UNESCO site—are cultural as well as economic forces in Argentina.

For many years, relatively few braved travel to a country that suffered one of the most brutal and arbitrary military dictatorships on a continent that was infamous for them. In the 20-plus years since the return to constitutional government, though, international travel has steadily increased even through hard economic times, and it’s now an almost ideal place to travel. By North American or European standards, it’s also affordable—even cheap.

Buenos Aires and Vicinity
Since the devaluation of 2002, South America's highest-profile capital has become a bargain destination that's reason enough to visit the country—many visitors spend weeks or even months enjoying its first-rate accommodations, innovative cuisine, all-night entertainment, non-stop shopping, and matchless cultural resources. Despite its international sophistication, it's also a city of intimate neighborhoods where no one is truly anonymous. The nearby suburbs offer rewarding excursions, most notably the myriad channels of the Paraná Delta.


Plaza de Mayo: Buenos Aires’s historic center is ground zero for public life in Argentina. (read more)

Café Tortoni: For nearly a century and a half, the Avenida de Mayo’s traditional gathering place has been an island of stability in a tumultuous ocean of political, social, and economic upheaval. It often plays host to artists, writers, singers, dancers, and visiting royalty and diplomats. (read more)

Galerías Pacífico: Even non-shoppers will appreciate the vision with which 1990s developers adapted this historic Microcentro building, on the Florida pedestrian mall, to contemporary commerce. The stunning murals in the cupola can be enjoyed on your own or with a guide. (read more)

Teatro Colón: The continent’s most important performing arts venue retains its style and dignity. Simply enjoy the beautiful Italian Renaissance design or take in a world-class performance. (read more)

Plaza Dorrego: Antique vendors and spirited performers clog San Telmo’s principal plaza and surrounding streets every Sunday. (read more)

Cementerio de la Recoleta: For both the living and the dead, the barrio of Recoleta is the capital’s prestige address. In the cemetery, you can visit the graves of Eva Perón and the Argentine elite. Those that failed to qualify for Recoleta, like Evita’s husband, Juan Perón, repose at the more egalitarian Cementerio de la Chacarita, across town. (read more)

MALBA: For decades, even during dictatorships, Argentina has had a thriving modern art scene, but the striking Museo de Arte Latinoamericano Buenos Aires in Palermo has given it a new focal point. (read more)

Museo Eva Perón: Promoted by Evita’s partisans, Argentina’s first museum dedicated to a woman is as notable for what it omits as for what it includes. (read more)

Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales: In the decidedly untouristed barrio of Caballito, this improving museum houses exhibits that shed light on the impressive Argentine dinosaur discoveries of recent decades. (read more)

Isla Martín García: Just off the Uruguayan coast, its bedrock rising out of the River Plate’s muddy waters, this historic island is an absorbing and tranquil getaway from Buenos Aires’s bustle. Get there from Tigre, only half an hour north of Buenos Aires.

The Pampas

Mesopotamia and the Paraná

Cuyo

The Andean Northwest

Córdoba Province

Northern Patagonia

Southern Patagonia

Tierra del Fuego and
Chilean Patagonia


Resources

    Argentina www.google.com.ar    
    Bolivia www.google.com.bo    
    Chile www.google.cl    
    Colombia www.google.com.co    
    Costa Rica www.google.co.cr    
    Cuba www.google.com.cu    
    República Dominicana www.google.com.do    
    Ecuador www.google.com.ec    
    El Salvador www.google.com.sv    
    España www.google.es    
    Guatemala www.google.com.gt    
    Honduras www.google.hn    
    México www.google.com.mx    
    Nicaragua www.google.com.ni    
    Panamá www.google.com.pa    
    Paraguay www.google.com.py    
    Perú www.google.com.pe    
    Puerto Rico www.google.com.pr    
    Uruguay www.google.com.uy    
    Venezuela www.google.co.ve    

 

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