Acreúna

Acreúna
Municipality

Location in Goiás state
Acreúna

Location in Brazil

Coordinates: 17°23′44″S 50°22′06″W / 17.39556°S 50.36833°W / -17.39556; -50.36833Coordinates: 17°23′44″S 50°22′06″W / 17.39556°S 50.36833°W / -17.39556; -50.36833
Country  Brazil
Region Central-West Region
State Goiás
Area
  Total 1,571.1 km2 (606.6 sq mi)
Elevation 542 m (1,778 ft)
Population (2007)
  Total 18,553
  Density 12/km2 (31/sq mi)
Time zone BRT/BRST (UTC-3/-2)
Postal code 75960-000

Acreúna is a city and municipality in western Goiás state, Brazil.

Location

Acreúna is located in the statistical micro-region of Vale do Rio dos Bois, southwest of the state capital, Goiânia, on BR-060, (Brasília-Acre) which links Goiânia with Rio Verde. The distance to Goiânia is 153 kilometers via BR-060 / Guapó / Indiara. Municipal boundaries:

History

The town appeared in 1964 in the territory of the municipality of Paraúna. It was created through the initiative of Benedicto Arystogogo de Mello, who had already founded the settlements of Riverlândia, in Rio Verde, and Vila Brasil, in Santa Helena de Goiás.

Mello negotiated with a large landowner of the region to begin selling the lots. The lands were on the banks of the Rio Verdão and near the Brasília – Acre highway, which was under construction at the time.

Origin of the name

The name of the town, Acreúna, comes from a combination of Acre, final destination of the highway which crosses the town, and Una, a tribute to Paraúna, the municipality where it had been located before becoming a separate municipality.

It became a district in 1968 and, thanks to its rapid population growth and economic development, it separated from Paraúna in 1976 to become an independent municipality.

Demographic and Political Data

The economy

The economy is based on agriculture, with a great production of sugarcane, cotton, corn, and soybeans (see below). The cattle herd had 99,000 head in 2003.

Vehicles (2007)

Source: IBGE

The main agricultural products (2007)

Source: Sepin

Farm information

Health

Education

Source: IBGE

For the complete list see Frigoletto.com

See also

References

    External links

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.