Santa Vitória do Palmar explained

Settlement Type:city
Official Name:Santa Vitória do Palmar
Website:www.santavitoria.rs.gov.br
Leader Name:Wellington Bacelo dos Santos (MDP)
Established Title:Founded
Established Date:1872
Area Total Km2:5244
Population Demonym:Vitoriense
Pushpin Map:Brazil
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Brazil
Population As Of:2020 [1]
Population Total:29,483
Population Density Km2:6.64
Utc Offset:-3
Coordinates:-33.5189°N -53.3681°W
Elevation M:23

Santa Vitória do Palmar (lit. "Saint Victoria of the Palms") is a Brazilian city and municipality. It is the southernmost municipality in Brazil, located in the state of Rio Grande do Sul. To the west of the municipality is the Lagoa Mirim and beyond that is Uruguay; to the east and southeast lies the Atlantic Ocean, and to the north is the city of Rio Grande. To the south, it borders the municipality of Chuí and Uruguay.

The city proper is located approximately 16km (10miles) inland from the Atlantic, 8km (05miles) east of Lagoa Mirim and 20km (10miles) north of the Uruguayan border at Chuí. The city is traversed by the Brazilian federal highway BR-471, the most important road link between Brazil and Uruguay. It is 504km (313miles) by road from the state capital, Porto Alegre, and about 370km (230miles) from Uruguay's capital, Montevideo.

Santa Vitória do Palmar used to be the southernmost city in Brazil, until the former village of Chuí was split from its territory and incorporated as a new city in 1997. However, while the urban seat of Chuí is more southerly, the territory of Santa Vitória do Palmar still extends slightly further south than Chuí's, and contains Brazil's southernmost geographic point, located on a bend of the Chuí River just upstream from its mouth on the Atlantic Ocean, near the village of Barra do Chuí, which also belongs to the municipality.

The municipality lies on a windy coastal plain which is a mosaic of sand dunes, lagoons (Lagoa Mangueira being the largest one), marshland spots and rice farms. This variety of different ecosystems side by side ensures a rich biodiversity, protected in the municipality's northern part in the Taim Ecological Station, shared with Rio Grande. The city's economy is based on rice growing, beef cattle and sheep raised for wool, in addition to being a transit point on BR-471, the main highway linking Brazil and Uruguay.

Santa Vitória do Palmar is a large municipality, about 160km (100miles) long north–south. Its coast also includes the larger part of Cassino Beach, the world's longest uninterrupted stretch of sandy ocean shore, over 240km (150miles) from the stony breakwaters of Rio Grande in the north to the mouth of Chuí River in the south. Two small beach resort villages are located in the municipality: Praia do Hermenegildo and Barra do Chuí, which is Brazil's southernmost inhabited place.

Four stones from the Santa Vitoria do Palmar meteorite was found near the town in 2003 and 2004.[2]

Geography

Climate

Santa Vitória do Palmar has a mild humid subtropical climate (Cfa, according to the Köppen climate classification), bordering an oceanic climate (Cfb), as the mean temperature in the hottest month is just above 22 °C.

Notes and References

  1. https://cidades.ibge.gov.br/brasil/rs/santa-vitoria-do-palmar/panorama IBGE 2020
  2. Web site: Santa Vitoria do Palmar. Meteoritical Bulletin Database. Meteoritical Society. 23 December 2012.