Brazil from National Geographic
"Christ the Redeemer," Rio de Janeiro
Photograph by Christian Heeb
From atop Corcovado Mountain, "Cristo Redentor," or "Christ the Redeemer," watches over the city of Rio de Janeiro, sprawled against the backdrop of Sugarloaf Mountain and Guanabara Bay. Visitors can climb by taxi or cog railway to gain this unparalleled view of the city.Carnaval Revelers, Rio de Janeiro
Photograph by Nelson Antoine/Fotoarena/LatinContent/Getty Images
A Carnaval parade in Rio de Janeiro includes fanciful floats and costumed performers. Many countries indulge in a riot of pleasures before the austere observance of Christian Lent—and Rio hosts one of the world’s biggest bacchanals.Amazon Dolphin
Photograph by Kevin Schafer
Called botos in Brazil, the freshwater dolphins of the Amazon appear to glow orange when navigating the river basin’s tea-colored brew of silt and rotting vegetation. Out of water they’re pale grey, with some marked in pink.Iguazu Falls
Photograph by Sharmy Francis,
One of the world's greatest cataracts shatters the Iguazu River between Argentina and Brazil. Ancient lore has it that a deity planned to marry an aborigine woman, but when she fled with her lover in a canoe down the Iguazu, the angry god sliced the river and damned the lovers to an eternal fall.Caimans in the Pantanal
Photograph by Joel Sartore
Crocodilian caimans are a ubiquitous presence in the Pantanal, a wetland that lies primarily in Brazil. Ten million caimans crowd Pantanal waters, so many that their numbers stayed healthy even when poachers claimed perhaps a million a year in the 1980s. The hides supplied the market for inexpensive crocodile-skin accessories.Pantanal Cowhands
Photograph by Joel Sartore
Cowhands pause on mule and horseback during the flood season in the Pantanal, a wetland ecosystem in parts of Brazil, Bolivia, and Paraguay. Ranchers in the enormous landlocked river delta are increasingly taking in ecotourists to supplement their income from cattle.Soccer Fans
Photograph by Ralph Orlowski/Getty Images
Brazil soccer fans celebrate their team’s victory in a match with Ghana at the World Cup in Dortmund, Germany, in 2006. The nation formed its first official team in 1914 and now boasts what is arguably the most successful national soccer team in the world.Itaquai River
Photograph by Nicolas Reynard
An aerial view of the Amazon Basin reveals the cursive meandering of the Itaquai River. The headwaters of the Itaquai and the adjacent Jutai River are situated in one of the most remote and uncharted places left on the planet, home to some of Brazil’s remaining pockets of isolated indigenous tribes.Close-Up of a toucan
Photograph by F. Lukasseck
The toco toucan, a native of South America’s tropical forests, is one of the world’s most recognizable birds. Its oversize, orange-yellow bill is six to nine inches (15 to 22 centimeters) long, about a third of the bird’s entire length and useful as a feeding tool.Pantanal Lagoons
Photograph by Joel Sartore
Verdant lagoons dot patches of elevated forest during the wet season in the Pantanal, one of Earth’s largest wetlands. Mammals such as jaguars and monkeys retreat to the forests until waters recede, feasting on fish and other aquatic life trapped in shrinking pools.Surui Indians
Photograph by Michael Nichols
The indigenous Surui (or Paiter) Indians have lost much of their forest territory to clearing. But recent research has shown that reserves established for Indian peoples are providing significant Amazon forest protection. Indigenous groups make up less than 1 percent (700,000) of Brazil’s population, most in the Amazon region.Sugarloaf Mountain
Photograph by Zoran Milich/Masterfile
Sugarloaf Mountain juts into the sky over a beach in Rio de Janeiro, a city known for its magnetic beach culture.Copacabana Beach, Rio de Janeiro
Photograph by Sergio Tafner Jorge
Families, swimmers, and sunbathers crowd Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro. With its crescent of sand, hotels, restaurants, bars, and shops, Copacabana might well be the most famous beach in the world.Sugarloaf Mountain Cable Cars
Photograph by Craig Hayman,
Cable cars ascend through low clouds to reach Pão de Açúcar (Sugarloaf), a true symbol of Rio. The landmark, which is actually two mountains, has been accessible via cable car since 1912.São Paulo Nightclub
Photograph by Christian Tragni/Aurora Photos
Clubgoers are lit by bright strobes while dancing at a discotheque in São Paolo. Dancing and nightlife are popular in the nation of nearly 200 million. São Paulo, with some 10.9 million people, is Brazil's largest city—and one of the world's largest metropolises.Dunes
Photograph by Francesc Carreras,
Rainwater-created pools provide oases between sand dunes in northeast Brazil. The region—subject to devastating droughts—is the second most populous in the country, extending from Maranhão in the north down to Bahia.Formoso River
Photograph by Minden Pictures/Masterlife
Palm trees beside the Formoso River are silhouetted against the horizon in Brazil’s cerrado, a vast savannah ecosystem. Conservationists are concerned that the biologically diverse region is under threat from the country’s unregulated biofuels boom.If life is a beach, Brazil is its headquarters. • Its first overseas visitors, from Portugal, wisely dedicated their attention to the glorious coastline, ignoring the jungly interior. • It is a big place claiming tenancy rights in most of the eastern half of South America. • Claiming more than 160 million souls, it has almost as many citizens as the rest of the continent’s other countries combined. • A melting pot of nearly countless cultures and races, with a stunning array of natural abundance in a landscape of unimaginable diversity.
Photograph by Andre Fagundes,
Photograph by Tiago Damas Martins,
Photograph by Flavio Andrade,
Photograph by Francesco Gola,
Photograph by Raymond Choo,
Photograph by Raphael Macek,
Photograph by Aurel Dahlgrun,
Photograph by Antoine Tardy,
Photograph by Pedro Leal,
Photograph by Katharina Gilcher,
Photograph by Ellen Leonhardt,
Photograph by Andre Fagundes,
Photograph by Tamsin Blue,
Photograph by Paul Meyer,
Photograph by Raymond Choo,
Photograph by Sara Andrea Vera Beltran,
Photograph by Christianus Fabbri,
Photograph by Alison DeGraff, My Shot
Photograph by Jose Fagundes Fl,
Photograph by Michel Braunstein,
Photograph by Gustavo Henrique Freire Chaves,
Photograph by Ashley Sykes,
Photograph by Luciano Sa,
Photograph by Trevor Bell,
Photograph by Eric Doggett,
Photograph by Brandon Sideleau,
Photograph by Stuart Price,
Photograph by Rogerio Mathias,
Photograph by Jose Fagundes Fl,
Photograph by Salvatore Gebbia,
Brazil Facts
Fast Facts
- Population:
- 184,184,000
- Capital:
- Brasília; 3,099,000
- Area:
- 8,547,403 square kilometers (3,300,169 square miles)
- Language:
- Portuguese
- Religion:
- Roman Catholic
- Currency:
- Real
- Life Expectancy:
- 69
- GDP per Capita:
- U.S. $7,600
- Literacy Percent:
- 86
Flag
More than 44 percent (85 million) are black or of mixed-race, a legacy of the African slave trade. Less than 1 percent (700,000) are from indigenous groups, mostly Indians in the Amazon region; smaller numbers of Japanese, other Asians, and Arabs live in the larger Brazilian cities.
The motto "Ordem e Progresso"—(Order and Progress)—appears on Brazil's flag. Political progress continues after years of military dictatorship gave way to civilian rule in 1985. Recent censuses reveal social progress, with lower infant mortality rates and higher literacy rates. Brazil's growing urbanization rate helps economic development (some 80 percent of Brazilians live in urban areas), but creates serious social and environmental problems in cities.
São Paulo, with some 10.9 million people, is Brazil's largest city—and one of the world's largest metropolises. It is the leading industrial producer and financial center, but problems with pollution, overcrowding, and poverty abound. The Southeast region of Brazil includes São Paulo, Belo Horizonte, and Rio de Janeiro—the economic hub of Brazil, containing more than 40 percent of the country's population.
South of São Paulo is a rich agricultural region with European-style standards of living, where German and Italian are still spoken alongside Portuguese. Itaipu, the second largest hydroelectric power facility in the world, provides electricity to power-hungry São Paulo.
Brazil's second most populous region is the Northeast region, from Maranhao in the north down to Bahia (the most African of Brazilian states).
The architecture of cities like Recife and Salvador (Portuguese colonial capital, 1549-1763) shows an earlier age of plantation wealth, but today this is a poor region subject to devastating droughts. Millions have left here for jobs in the Southeast. However, tourism has begun to boom due to sunny weather, samba music, and soft sand beaches.
The North, dominated by the Amazon, is the largest region with the fewest people. The government is making progress in conserving the tropical rain forest and protecting the indigenous people. Tumucumaque National Park, created in 2002, is the world's largest tropical forest park.
ECONOMY
- Industry: Textiles, , chemicals, cement, lumber, iron ore
- Agriculture: Coffee, soybeans, wheat, rice; beef
- Exports: Transport equipment, iron ore, soybeans, , coffee
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