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Energy Efficient Building
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Exclusive Homes with special design options. Any size, solar powered or grid, highly energy efficient, hurricane and water resistant. No rotting structure with lifetime warrantee. Finest interior quality with natural materials like wood, stone, marbel or clay.
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Geography:
Area 22,963 sq km (8,866 sq. miles) slightly larger than
Massachusetts. Capital: Belmopan (pop. 4,500). Belize borders the
Caribbean Sea along the eastern shore of Central America just below
the Yucatan Peninsula. It is bounded on the north and west by Mexico
and on the south and west by Guatemala.
Belize, only 8,867 square miles in size, is situated on the northeast
coast of Central America. The Caribbean Sea lies to the east and from
the air its turquoise waters are clear, allowing the multicolored coral
formation of the Great Barrier Reef to be easily observed. Coral
islands called cayes, covered with stands of mangrove trees, dot the
coast. Lying in aquamarine and jade-colored bays, these cayes protect
the jungled coastline from the ravages of the sea.
North of Belize lies the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico. The Rio Hondo,
which empties into Chetumal Bay, is the border between the two
countries. The eastern border is demarcated by a surveyed line through
the jungle separating Belize from the El Peten Department of Guatemala.
To the south, the Belize/Guatemalan border is the Rio Sarstoon which
flows east to the Caribbean Sea. The country is divided by the eastward
flowing Belize River which is a major transportation route for native
goods. The north half of the country is made up of synclinal folds of
low lying, parallel limestone ridges running NNE to SSW. These jungle
covered ridges are the spines of fossil coral reefs. In the valleys
between run the perennial rivers, the Hondo, Nuevo, and Freshwater
Creek. The Northern Peten and Campeche Regions of the Yucatan are
drained by these river basins. This area, known as the "Maya
Heartland," contains the classic Maya center of Tikal as well as many
minor ceremonial centers and hundreds of occupation sites. The lagoons
along the Nuevo River and Freshwater Creek are also areas of Maya site
concentration. Great mangrove swamps line the northern coast, extend
inland for many miles, and cover much of the northern district.
Southern Belize is the site of large plantations that grow
citrus, an important export. Rising out of the palm-covered coastal
plain of southern Belize are the Maya Mountains. Mostly unexplored,
they are covered by verdant jungle and a canopy of tropical rain
clouds. The paleozoic horst is comprised of granite and metamorphosed
sandstone which sustains stands of pine in its infertile acidic soil.
Unsuitable for agriculture, the ridge (note that in Belize, ridge
refers to any change in vegetation) was exploited by Preceramic peoples
and Maya hunters. Averaging approximately 1,000 feet, the main divide
is relatively dwarfed by Victoria Peak which reaches 3,680 feet. The
southern plateau becomes broader and descends westwardly. The northern
part of this region, known as the Mountain Pine Ridge area, lies in the
Cayo District.
The higher elevation (1,500-2,700 feet) provides spectacular falls for
the many streams that lace the land. The plateau's northern edge is a
broken limestone escarpment descending steeply to the Sibun River
Valley, an area dotted with many unexplored caves.
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