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Plácido de Castro, Acre

Municipality of Acre, Brazil


Municipality of Acre, Brazil

FieldValue
official_namePlácido de Castro
settlement_typeMunicipality
motto
image_skylinePlácidodeCastro.jpg
image_captionStreet scene
image_flagBandeira Placido Castro.svg
image_shieldBrasao Placido de Castro.png
image_mapAcre Municip PlacidodeCastro.svg
map_captionLocation of municipality in Acre State
pushpin_map
pushpin_label_positionbottom
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Brazil
<!-- Location ------------------>subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name[[Image:Flag of Brazil.svg25px]] Brazil
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1Acre
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameCamilo da Silva (PSD-AC)
established_title
established_date
unit_prefImperial
area_total_km22047
area_land_km2
area_blank1_sq_mi
population_as_of2020 est
population_total19,955
population_blank1_titleEthnicities
population_density_blank1_sq_mi
timezoneACT
utc_offset&minus;5
coordinates
elevation_footnotes
elevation_ft
postal_code_type
websitehttp://www.placidodecastro.ac.cnm.org.br/

Plácido de Castro () is a municipality located in the east of the Brazilian state of Acre on the border with Bolivia.

Geography

The municipal seat is on the left bank of the Abunã River, which defines the boundary between Brazil and Bolivia. It is 95 km from Rio Branco by road, or 80 km as the crow flies, accessible to weekend tourists from the city via the AC-40 highway. It has an area of 1945 km2, and is the 19th largest in area in Acre. The municipality is bounded to the north and northwest by the municipality of Senador Guiomard, to the east by the municipality of Acrelândia, to the south by Bolivia and to the west by the municipality of Capixaba. The municipality contains the Plácido de Castro Ecological Park, a 34 ha municipal conservation area that contains 113 genera of trees. An area that held large trees such as Brazil nut, rubber, cocoa and mahogany was destroyed by fire in 2005.

The surrounding area has several large, ancient earthworks termed "geoglifos" by regional archaeologists. An example is clearly visible in aerial photography at .

History

In the early 20th century the region of the present municipality was a place where fugitives from the law took refuge. José Plácido de Castro, who was prefect of the Alto Acre department in 1906–07, recommended the need for a settlement to stabilise the situation. In 1922 a trading post was established, serving extractors of nuts and rubber in the Abunã River basin. The post was in a rubber tappers' settlement named Pacatuba on the São Gabriel rubber estate, which was soon renamed after Plácido de Castro, a hero of the Acre War.

The Plácido de Castro District is shown as part of the Rio Branco municipality in the divisions of 31 December 1936 and 1 July 1960. The town did not develop until the 1940s and 1950s with the opening of the present road that links the city of Rio Branco to the towns of Quinari (Senador Guiomard) and Plácido de Castro. The municipality of Plácido de Castro was created on 10 March 1963.

People and economy

The 2010 census gave the population as 17,209, of which 8,999 were men and 8,210 women. 12,384 were literate. 6,787 were Roman Catholic and 5,134 were Evangelical Christians. The Human Development Index as of 2010 was 0.622. In 2015 there were 3,260 elementary school pupils and 776 secondary school pupils. Estimated population as of 2016 was 18,159.

The municipality is the 8th largest in Acre by population, with a population density of 8.87 inhabitants per square kilometre. The local economy is based on beef and dairy cattle, saw mills, furniture manufacture, tourism, agriculture and extraction, particularly Brazil nuts. The neighbouring Bolivian village of Vila Montevidéu had a free trade zone for imported goods that was much visited by Brazilians. The village was burned in a major fire in 2007 and was rebuilt on a nearby site with the new name of Vila Evo Morales. The name honours President Evo Morales of Bolivia, who sent aid for reconstruction and was the first Bolivian president to visit the village.

References

Sources

  • {{citation|ref=|language=pt
  • {{citation|ref=|language=pt
  • {{citation|location=Porto Velho, Brasil|year=2015 |chapter-url=https://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/bitstream/doc/1031004/1/2015082.pdf|access-date=2016-07-07}}

References

  1. [https://cidades.ibge.gov.br/brasil/ac/placido-de-castro/panorama IBGE 2020]
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