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Its
six major regions are as follows:

Cuyo &
the Andean Northwest:
This area
surrounding the Andes began as a colony of Peru, but today
only a few miners and herders occupy this unforgiving region
of volcanic peaks and salt lakes. Very little rain falls in
Cuyo, though to the east are found the fertile river valleys
and subtropical lowlands of the Gran Chaco.
Mesopotamia & the Northeast:
Mesopotamia, a
broad, flat plain between the Parana and Uraguay Rivers in
northern Argentina, is wet, swampy and extremely hot during
the summer. The northern province of Misiones, a more
mountainous region nearly enclosed by Brazil and Paraguay, is
densely forested and contains a section of the majestic Iguazu
Falls.
The
Chaco:
This parched area
in the west is part of the enormous Gran Chaco, a region that
Argentina shares with Bolivia, Paraguay, and Brazil.
The Chaco contains both grassland
and thorny forest.
The
Pampas:
These fertile
plains are Argentina's bread- basket. They consist of the
Humid Pampas along the seaboard and the Dry Pampas in the west
and south. The region includes Buenos Aires, as well as the
world- class beaches of its surrounding area.
Patagonia and the Lake District:
South of the Rio
Colorado, experiences a desert climate, although temperatures
range from mild to subzero and terrain varies from bucolic
river valleys to the gigantic, ice-capped southern Andes. Its
cool grazing grounds support enormous flocks of sheep, and
numerous fruit and vegetable farms can be found in the valleys.
Patagonia also holds vast reserves of oil and coal.
Tierra
del Fuego:
The Land of Fire
is actually an archipelago including the Isla Grande de Tierra
del Fuego (which Argentina shares with neighbouring Chile) and
numerous smaller islands. Northern Isla Grande is similar in
terrain to Patagonia's plains, while the mountainous area in
the south is filled with forests and glaciers. Its climate is
usually mild year-round, although storms are frequent.

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Comprising
almost the entire southern half of South America, Argentina is
the world's eighth largest country, covering an area of 2.8
million square km. Argentina possesses some of the world's
tallest mountains, expansive deserts, and impressive
waterfalls, with the diversity of the land ranging from wild,
remote areas in southern Patagonia to the bustling metropolis
of Buenos Aires in the north.
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