FACTOID # 154: Women make up more than 10% of the prison population in only six countries: Thailand, , Qatar, Paraguay, Costa Rica, and Singapore.
 
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Encyclopedia > San Pedro department
Statistics
Capital: San Pedro (del Ycuamandyyú)
Area: 20,002 km²
Inhabitants: 318,787 (2002)
Pop. density: 15.9 inh./km²
ISO 3166-2: PA-2
Map


San Pedro is a department in Paraguay. The capital is the city of San Pedro.


The department is divided in 17 districts:

  1. Antequera
  2. Capiibary
  3. Choré
  4. General Elizardo Aquino
  5. General Isidoro Resquín
  6. Guayaibí
  7. Itacurubí del Rosario
  8. Lima
  9. Nueva Germania
  10. San Estanislao
  11. San Pablo
  12. San Pedro del Ycuamandyyú
  13. Tacuatí
  14. Unión
  15. Veinticinco de Diciembre
  16. Villa del Rosario
  17. Yataity del Norte



  Results from FactBites:
 
San Mateo County -- Parks Department -- -- San Pedro Valley Park (1316 words)
A vast area embracing the middle and south forks of San Pedro Creek, which are Steelhead spawning grounds, this park is nestled amongst the Santa Cruz Mountain range and the foothills of Pacifica.
San Pedro Valley soon became an important link in the Spanish Mission System, for it offered valuable resources, which could not be produced in San Francisco at Mission Dolores.
San Pedro Valley County Park is also supported by an active volunteer group known as the Friends of San Pedro Valley Park.  These volunteers staff the park's visitor center and provide various programs and activities that help Park Rangers maintain the facilities and the environment of this County Park.
San Pedro Sula at AllExperts (694 words)
San Pedro was founded near the modern town of Choloma, but moved closer to the Chamelecon river sometime in the 16th century.
San Pedro was sacked and burned in the 17th century, and the city moved again, this time to its modern location, further south and away from the rivers.
San Pedro, whose name has evolved over the years to San Pedro Sula (after the mines to the west), was officially recognized as a city by the Congress of Honduras on October 8,2002, long after it had grown to be the industrial capital of Honduras, and the second largest city in the country.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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