Goiandira

Goiandira
Municipality

Location in Goiás state
Goiandira

Location in Brazil

Coordinates: 18°08′06″S 48°05′00″W / 18.13500°S 48.08333°W / -18.13500; -48.08333Coordinates: 18°08′06″S 48°05′00″W / 18.13500°S 48.08333°W / -18.13500; -48.08333
Country  Brazil
Region Central-West Region
State Goiás
Microregion Catalão
Area
  Total 560.71 km2 (216.49 sq mi)
Elevation 848 m (2,782 ft)
Population (2007)
  Total 4,925
  Density 8.8/km2 (23/sq mi)
Time zone BRT/BRST (UTC-3/-2)
Postal code 75740-000

Goiandira is a municipality in the southeastern portion of the Brazilian state of Goiás. The population was 4,925 (2007) in a total area of 560.7 km² (10/10/2002).

Geography

Goiandira is in the statistical micro-region of Catalão. It is located 288 km. from the state capital, Goiânia and is connected by BR-153 / Aparecida de Goiânia / GO-217 / Caldas Novas / GO-139 / Corumbaíba / GO-210 / Nova Aurora.

It has boundaries with the municipalities of Catalão, Cumari, Nova Aurora and Ipameri.

The climate is tropical, with an average annual temperature of 25 °C. The rainy season is from October to May and the dry season extends from May to September. Annual rainfall is approximately 1,400 mm.

History

European settlement began in 1800 when Tomás Garcia, from Minas Gerais, took possession of a vast area of land called Campo Limpo. He sold half of the land to Jerônimo de Teixeira. At the beginning of the twentieth century the railroad arrived and a town grew around the station. Campo Limpo became a district of Catalão in 1913, later separating to become a municipality in 1931 and changing the name to Goiandira, after the name of the railroad station.

Political data

Demographics

Economy

The economy is based on cattle raising for meat and milk, in addition to agriculture—mainly corn and soybeans. There were approximately 44,800 head of cattle in the region in 2006 and 31,000 head of poultry. There were no agricultural products with more than 1,000 hectares planted in 2006. The main ones were rice, bananas, sugarcane, beans, manioc, corn, and soybeans.

Agricultural data 2006

Education and health

Ranking on the Municipal Human Development Index

See also

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.