- Yucatán Peninsula
The Yucatán Peninsula, in Southeastern
Mexico , separates theCaribbean Sea from theGulf of Mexico . It also has a costline on theYucatán Channel . Thepeninsula lies east of theIsthmus of Tehuantepec , a northwestern geographic partition separating the region ofCentral America from the rest ofNorth America .The peninsula comprises the Mexican states of
Yucatán ,Campeche , andQuintana Roo ; the northern part of the nation ofBelize ; andGuatemala 's northern department ofEl Petén . Mexican states situated on the isthmus to the west of the peninsula includeChiapas andTabasco and is directly within thehurricane belt .Geology
The peninsula is the surface exposed portion of the larger Yucatán Platform, all of which is composed of carbonate and soluble rocks, being mostly
limestone although dolomite and evaporites are also present at various depths. The whole of the Yucatán peninsula is akarst landscape. Sinkholes, locally calledcenotes are widespread in the northern lowlands.This peninsula is separated from
Cuba by theYucatán Channel , the widest connection of theGulf of Mexico with theCaribbean Sea and the rest of theAtlantic Ocean .According to the
Alvarez hypothesis , the Yucatán Peninsula was the site of an ancientasteroid impact which is likely to have caused themass extinction at the end of theCretaceous Period . The crater is centered off the north coast of the modern town of Chicxulub (seeChicxulub Crater ). The now-famous "Ring of Cenotes" (visible inNASA imagery) outlines one of the shock-waves from this impact event in the rock of ~65 millions years of age, which lies more than 1 km below the modern ground surface, with the rock above the impact strata all being younger in age. The mechanism by which this deeply buried impact crater is observed and defined through mass spectrometers and digital radar imagers.Water Resources
Cenotes have remained the primary water source for ancient and contemporary Maya people, as there are no rivers and very few lakes on the peninsula. [BBC : "Planet Earth", part 4: Caves.]Vegetation
Short and tall dry tropical jungles are the predominant natural vegetation types of the Yucatan peninsula.
The boundaries between northern Guatemala (El Petén), Mexico (
Campeche andQuintana Roo ), and westernBelize are still occupied by the largest continuous tracts of tropicalrainforest inCentral America . However, these forests are suffering extensivedeforestation .Etymology
There is a popular myth that the name Yucatán comes from the Yucatec Maya phrase for "listen how they speak," or "I don't understand your words" -- supposedly said by contact period Maya when the first Spanish explorers asked what the area was called. The proper derivation of the word Yucatán is widely debated. However, it is also claimed that the actual source of the name "Yucatan" is the Nahuatl (Aztec) word Yokatlān, "place of richness."
People
The Yucatán Peninsula comprises a significant proportion of the ancient Maya Lowlands (although the Maya culture extended south of the Yucatán peninsula, through present Guatemala and into Honduras and highland Chiapas). There are many Maya archaeological sites throughout the peninsula; some of the better-known are
Chichen Itza ,Tulum andUxmal . [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Maya_sites] , [http://mayaruins.com/yucmap.html] Indigenous Maya andMestizo s of partial Maya descent still make up a sizable portion of the region's population, andMayan languages are still widely spoken there.In the late historic and early modern eras, the Yucatán Peninsula was largely a cattle ranching, logging,
chicle andhenequen production area. Since the 1970s (and the fall of the world henequen and chicle markets due to the advent of synthetic substitutes), the Yucatán Peninsula has reoriented its economy towards tourism, especially in the Mexican state ofQuintana Roo . Once a small fishing village,Cancún in the northeast of the peninsula has grown into a thriving city. TheRiviera Maya , which stretches along the east coast of the peninsula betweenCancún andTulum , currently has more than 50,000 beds and is visited by many thousands of tourists every year.Climate
Like much of the
Caribbean , the peninsula lies within the Atlantic Hurricane Belt, and with its almost uniformly flat terrain it is vulnerable to these large storms coming from the east. The2005 Atlantic Hurricane Season was a particularly bad season forMexico 's tourism industry, with two forceful category 5 storms hitting, Hurricane Emily andHurricane Wilma . The2006 Atlantic Hurricane Season was a typical year which left the Yucatán untouched, but in the 2007 Atlantic Hurricane season Yucatán was hit by theHurricane Dean (also a category 5 storm), nevertheless Dean left little damage on the peninsula despite heavy localized flooding.Strong storms called nortes can quickly descend on the Yucatán Peninsula any time of year. Although these storms pummel the area with heavy rains and high winds, they tend to be short-lived, clearing after about an hour. The average percentage of days with rain per month ranges from a monthly low of 7% in April to a high of 25% in October. Breezes can have a cooling effect,
humidity is generally high, particularly in the remaining rainforest areas.References
External links
* [http://www.visitmexico.com/wb/Visitmexico/Visi_Yucatan Yucatán Peninsula] - "Visite Mexico", Official site of the Mexico Tourism Board
* [http://www.yucatanwildlife.com Yucatan Wildlife] - Information about wildlife of the Yucatan Peninsula
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