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Matilla


FieldValue
nameMatilla
native_name
native_name_langes
settlement_typeTown
image_skylineIglesia de Matilla 2.jpg
image_altChurch of Matilla
image_captionChurch of Matilla
flag_altFlag
shield_altCoat of arms
image_mapComuna de Pica.svg
map_altMap of Pica in Tarapacá Region
map_captionMap of the commune of Pica in Tarapacá Region
pushpin_mapChile
pushpin_map_narrowyes
pushpin_label_positionbottom
pushpin_map_altLocation in Chile
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Chile
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameChile
subdivision_type1Region
subdivision_name1Tarapacá
subdivision_type2Province
subdivision_name2Tamarugal
government_typeMunicipal council
leader_titleAlcalde
unit_prefMetric
elevation_m1206
population_footnotes
population_total380
population_as_of2017 Census
population_density_km2auto
population_blank1_titleUrban
population_blank2_titleRural
demographics_type1Sex
demographics1_footnotes
demographics1_title1Men
demographics1_info1181
demographics1_title2Women
demographics1_info2199
timezoneCLT
utc_offset-4
timezone_DSTCLST
utc_offset_DST-3
area_code(+56) 5

Matilla is a Chilean village and oasis in the interior of Atacama Desert. It lies four kilometers southwest of the oasis town of Pica. As of 2017 Matilla had 380 inhabitants and 217 homes. It hosts underground aqueducts in various states of decay. These aqueducts are locally known as socavones and tap Pica Aquifer.

In the late 19th century its inhabitants were prone to suffer typhus, ostensibly because of the poor quality of the village's water source and the existence of a nearby swamp.

The population of Matilla is mostly of Spanish descent in contrast to Pica whose old inhabitants have more indigenous heritage.

The location became first known to the Spanish after the men of Diego de Almagro reached the area in 1536 on their return to Peru. Local lore says the town was founded in 1547 by Márquez de Loayza who arrived from present-day Bolivia. Other sources give 1642 as the date of founding.

References

References

  1. (2019). "Ciudades, pueblos, aldeas y caceríos 2019". National Statistics Institute.
  2. "Chile Time". WorldTimeZones.org.
  3. "Chile Summer Time". WorldTimeZones.org.
  4. Lictevout, Elizabeth. (2020). "Exploration, mapping and characterization of filtration galleries of the Pica Oasis, northern Chile: A contribution to the knowledge of the Pica aquifer". [[Andean Geology]].
  5. Castro Castro, Luis. (2015). "Quehacer y planteamientos del cura Luis Friedrich en el oasis de Pica durante la chilenización de Tarapacá, 1903-1907". Revista de Historia Regional y Local.
  6. Alba, Valencia. (1978). "Matilla. Apuntes etnográficos". BFUCh.
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