Title.
Paragraph.
Title.
Paragraph.
Panama Should Be On Your Short List Today...
Panama is within Central America, settled on the map between Columbia and Costa Rica. Its borders encounter both the Caribbean Sea as well as the Pacific Ocean. It maintains a valuable location on the Isthmus of Panama. As of 2000, Panama currently manages and maintains the Panama Canal that connects the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea to the Northern Pacific Ocean. Panama is itself 124th in the world based on its size. The country is 75,420 square kilometers only.
The Darien Gap stands flanked by Panama and Colombia and is dominated by a nearly impenetrable jungle. The barrier comes not just as a result of thick vegetation but from possible meetings with Colombian guerillas and drug dealers, as well as jungle preservationists. All of these elements have created a split in the Pan-American Highway, which apart from this would provide a non-stop road starting in Alaska and finishing in Patagonia.
The Volcán Barú (formerly the Volcán de Chiriquí) stands out as the highest measured location on Panama’s map. It rises to 3,475 meters (11,401 feet). Additional points of interest on Panama's map are the Darien Gap, the Pan-American Highway, its amazing coastlines, and its range of mountains and hills.
The country's international boundaries with Colombia and Costa Rica are plainly established without conflicts. Curiously, the country claims the ocean floor of the continental shelf as part of Panama. This underwater territory was defined on the Panama map as extending to the 500-meter submarine contour. Not only that, laws in 1958 and 1968 maintain that Panama holds power over the seabed up to 12 nautical miles away from the coasts, and declare a 200-nautical-mile Exclusive Economic Zone.
Instead of the North or South Coast, Panama's coasts are known as the Caribbean and Pacific Coasts. Colombia is located towards the east with Costa Rica towards the west. Offering directions can sometimes be unusual, even confusing, in Panama because of the country's general location and form. An illustration - a ship moving through the Panama Canal leaving from the Caribbean to the Pacific is traveling southeast rather than west. Additionally, Panama City's sunrise can be found to the east - over the Pacific!
Another principal aspect of Panama's map is the line of mountains and hills forming the continental divide. Near the Colombian border these mountains are related to the Andean skyline of South America, but they are not linked to any of North America's extensive mountain ranges. Close to the Costa Rican border Panama's mountainous skyline is called the Cordillera de Talamanca. Moving to the east, the mountains turn into the Serranía de Tabasará. And finally, the portion of the mountains along the lower part of the isthmus, near the canal, is named the Sierra de Veraguas. Panama’s mapmakers typically refer to the skyline of mountains that run the whole way from Costa Rica to the canal as the Cordillera Central.
Additional points of interest on the map and structure of Panama have to do with its nine provinces. Their boundaries have stayed the same from the day of their creation at independence in 1903. Each province has districts. Each district has corregimientos. The divisions are modify over time according to shifts in the population as realized in census reports.
The jungles, mountains and coastal areas of Panama make it the most diverse of all of the countries in Central America regarding wildlife. Panama is unique as it is not simply the home of South American wildlife varieties, but on the contrary, it is home to North American wildlife as well. One last facet that relates to what’s on the map in Panama is its flora and fauna..