Mar 092015
 
The geography in "Something for Nothing", Robert Richter’s latest novel, set in the swampy lowlands of coastal Nayarit

How much geography can you learn from a novel? In some cases, plenty! Robert Richter’s latest novel, Something for Nothing, is a case in point. Set in the swampy lowlands of coastal Nayarit, it is not only a fun read but provides armchair travelers with an easy introduction to the geography of western Mexico. The […]

Beach replenishment needed in Quintana Roo

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Mar 022015
 

Officials in Quintana Roo claim that beach replenishment in the state requires the investment of at least 500 million pesos (about 35 million dollars) in the next few years, and are asking for federal help. After Hurricane Wilma in 2005, many beaches in Quintana Roo were badly damaged. Following the hurricane, initial beach restoration efforts […]

Which cities in Mexico have the highest cost of living?

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Feb 262015
 
Which cities in Mexico have the highest cost of living?

The recently published ‘Costo de Vida Nacional 2014-2015’ report from Recursos Humanos Mercer (Mercer Human Resources) provides a comparison of the cost of living in 42 cities, based on the cost of 182 different products and services. The study is released annually to provide a basis for corporations to decide on employee remuneration to reflect […]

Feb 232015
 
Mexico could be world's 6th largest economy by 2050

Consultancy PwC, the world’s second largest multinational professional services network has published an updated edition of The World in 2050. In the latest edition, The World in 2050: Will the shift in global economic power continue?, the authors present economic growth projections for 32 of the largest economies in the world, accounting for around 84% […]

Rodrigo Medellin, Mexico’s Bat Man

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Feb 192015
 
Rodrigo Medellin, Mexico's Bat Man

Rodrigo Medellin, a Mexican expert on bats (Mexico’s Bat Man) was the winner of the 2012 Whitley Fund for Nature Gold Award for his on-going work to study, raise awareness and highlight the importance of Latin America’s bats. The award reflects Medellin’s outstanding contribution to nature conservation. This short video narrated by Sir David Attenborough, […]

Slight decrease in the number of “Los Ninis” in Mexico

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Feb 092015
 
Slight decrease in the number of "Los Ninis" in Mexico

Los ninis are young people (aged 15-29) that “ni trabaja, ni estudia” (neither work nor study). They have become the focus of much press attention in the past few years, often accompanied by the phrase “Mexico’s lost generation”. According to a recent OECD report, “Education at Glance 2015”, two out of every ten Mexicans in […]

Ground subsidence in Mexico City threatens 10,000 homes

 Mexico's geography in the Press  Comments Off on Ground subsidence in Mexico City threatens 10,000 homes
Feb 052015
 

The local authorities in Iztapalapa, in the eastern section of the Mexico City Metropolitan Area, and one of the most interesting locations in Mexico in which to witness Easter celebrations, calculate that around 10,000 homes are in the area are at “high risk” of serious damage due to ground subsidence. Some parts of the city are […]

Where are the mining concessions in Mexico?

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Feb 022015
 
Where are the mining concessions in Mexico?

A series of graphics prepared by Mexico City daily El Universal includes a map showing the details of all the mining concessions in Mexico. According to the newspaper’s analysis, one fifth of Mexico’s total land area is subject to mining concessions belonging to one company or another. The six companies holding the largest areas of […]

The geography of Mexico’s beer industry

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Jan 292015
 
The geography of Mexico's beer industry

In a previous post – The emergence of two major beer-makers in Mexico – we looked at how Mexico’s beer industry came to be dominated by two large players: Femsa and Modelo, both now owned by foreign corporations. The map below shows the location and date of inauguration of all major breweries in Mexico. How […]

Mexico has seven of the world’s 100 best hotels

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Jan 262015
 
Mexico has seven of the world’s 100 best hotels

A survey of more than 75,000 Condé Nast Traveler readers placed seven Mexican hotels in the world’s top 100. Mexico’s top hotel (#15 in the rankings) was the Viceroy Rivera Maya hotel, in Playa del Carmen (Quintana Roo). It was joined in the top 100 by Rancho La Puerta in Tecate (Baja California), St. Regis […]

Christmas in Mexico, according to one news agency

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Jan 252015
 
Christmas in Mexico, according to one news agency

According to its website, “The QMI Agency is French and English Canada’s leading news reference for daily, intermittent and event-driven needs. Its offering most notably includes texts, images, videos and other interactive content.” QMI’s Facebook page promotes its graphics department which “creates infographics for use throughout our chain” and boasts that “QMI Agency provides reliable, […]

Tourist numbers for Cancún, 2000-2014

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Jan 212015
 
Tourist numbers for Cancún, 2000-2014

The table shows the number of tourists (national and international) visiting Cancún, Quintana Roo, Mexico, 2000-2013. From 2000 until 2011, tourist numbers fluctuated between 2.8 and 3.3 million. Since 2011, tourist numbers have risen sharply, to 3.6 million in 2012, 4.1 million in 2013 and a preliminary estimate of 4.3 million for 2014. Cancún currently […]

The Codex Mendoza, a key resource about Aztec times, can now be viewed online

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Jan 192015
 
The Codex Mendoza, a key resource about Aztec times, can now be viewed online

The Codex Mendoza, which we have referred to in several previous posts, can now be viewed via an amazing online interactive resource organized by INAH, Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History, in association with Oxford’s Bodleian Library and King’s College, London. Compiled in 1542, and richly illustrated, the Codex Mendoza is one of the […]

Video documentation of the Lacondon Indians in Chiapas

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Jan 162015
 

The Lacondon Maya are one of the most isolated and culturally conservative of Mexico’s numerous indigenous peoples. Their homeland is in the remote Lacondon Jungle in eastern Chiapas, close to the Guatemalan border. The Lacondon were the only Mayan people not conquered or converted by the Spanish during the colonial era. Until the mid-20th century […]

Jan 132015
 
Which parts of Mexico have travel advisories?

At this time of year, Mexico attracts millions of visitors seeking to escape the cold weather further north. The vast majority of visitors will never experience any problem during their travels in Mexico, but both the US State Department and Canadian government continue to issue regular warnings to those considering travel in Mexico. Some of […]

The spatial diffusion of Banamex branches across Mexico prior to 1960

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Jan 102015
 
The spatial diffusion of Banamex branches across Mexico prior to 1960

This post looks at where branches of Banamex (Banco Nacional de México) were founded in the period prior to 1960. Banamex is one of the oldest banking institutions in Mexico. It is now a subsidiary of Citigroup, but remains the second largest bank in the country after BBVA Bancomer. Banamex was formed on 2 June […]

The Mexican tradition of Three Kings Day

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Jan 062015
 
The Mexican tradition of Three Kings Day

Unlike the USA and Canada, where gifts are usually exchanged on Christmas Day (25 December), the original tradition in Mexico over the Christmas season was to exchange presents on Three Kings Day (Día de los Reyes, 6 January). In the Christian calendar, 6 January marks the Feast of the Epiphany, the day when the magi […]

Nuevo León’s unusual shape

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Jan 032015
 
Nuevo León's unusual shape

The northern state of Nuevo León is an industrial powerhouse, centered on Monterrey, Mexico’s third-largest city. The state’s shape on a map is unusual in more ways than one. The state has a long north-south axis and is very narrow from west to east. The strange indentation south of Monterrey is largely determined by relief. […]

A Happy New Year to all our readers!

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Jan 012015
 
A Happy New Year to all our readers!

We had no idea when we first published Geo-Mexico, the geography and dynamics of modern Mexico, and started this associated blog, how many readers we would reach. On the one hand, very few U.S. or Canadian universities have courses devoted specifically to Mexico. There are quite a number of geography courses with titles such as […]

The mystery of the Alarcon Rise

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Dec 292014
 
The mystery of the Alarcon Rise

Geologists have discovered that some strange things are happening off the southern coast of the Baja California Peninsula. In essence, while most of Mexico rests on the North American plate, the Baja California Peninsula is on the gigantic Pacific plate. The Pacific plate is moving slowly northwest and the pressures in the zone where these […]

Mexico’s vehicle industry

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Dec 272014
 
Mexico’s vehicle industry

Mexico is one of the world’s “Top Ten” countries for vehicle production and for vehicle exports. In 2014, it has overtaken Brazil to become the world’s 7th largest vehicle producer and fourth largest exporter. 80% of Mexico’s production of around 3.3 million vehicles in 2014 were made for export. The trade surplus generated by the […]

Seasonal greetings from Geo-Mexico!

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Dec 242014
 
Seasonal greetings from Geo-Mexico!

Geo-Mexico wishes all its readers the warmest seasonal greetings. The photo shows Mexico’s only floating Christmas Tree. It can be seen near Tenago de las Flores in the municipality of Huachinango in the northern part of the state of Puebla. The 15-meter-high tree, with Christmas lights, stands on a wooden platform atop a raft of […]

Mexico City looks to expand its metro network

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Dec 222014
 
Mexico City looks to expand its metro network

Plans to expand Mexico City’s metro network, announced by the federal government, will require investments totaling around 2.8 billion dollars. The first contracts are expected to be awarded next year, with most projects due to be completed by 2018, the final year of this administration. The major proposals affect three metro lines: Metro Line A […]

The spatial development of Mexico’s railway network

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Dec 202014
 
The spatial development of Mexico's railway network

At the end of the nineteenth century, during the successive presidencies of Porfirio Díaz, railway building leapt forward. Díaz aggressively encouraged rail development through generous concessions and government subsidies to foreign investors. By 1884 Mexico had 12,000 km of track, including a US-financed link from Mexico City to the USA through Torreón, Chihuahua and Ciudad […]

The production of Christmas trees in Mexico

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Dec 182014
 
The production of Christmas trees in Mexico

According to consumer surveys, only one out of every five Mexican households decorates a natural Christmas tree during the holiday season; the other 80% of households decorate artificial trees. About 75% of natural trees are bought from traditional retailers, with the remaining 25% purchased from informal street vendors. Almost all purchases of natural Christmas trees […]

Dec 152014
 
LA Times continues its compelling and disturbing investigation into farmworkers in Mexico

A week ago, we highlighted the first of a series of four articles in the LA Times about the living and working conditions faced by migrant farmworkers in Mexico as they harvest crops that end up on dinner tables not only in Mexico, but also in the USA. The other three articles in the series […]

Access to safe water is a human right in Mexico

 Mexico's geography in the Press  Comments Off on Access to safe water is a human right in Mexico
Dec 132014
 

Earlier this year, David Korenfeld, the director of Mexico’s National Water Commission (Conagua), was chosen to head the inter-governmental council that oversees UNESCO’s International Hydrological Program (IHP). The IHP is the only inter-governmental program of the U.N. system devoted to water research, water-resources management, and education and capacity building. In his acceptance speech, Korenfeld called […]

The geography of dengue fever in Mexico

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Dec 112014
 
The geography of dengue fever in Mexico

Preventing, diagnosing and treating dengue fever is a major public health issue in many parts of the world, including central America and Mexico. The disease is transmitted by mosquitoes. Infected patients develop a sudden high fever, usually accompanied by generalized body pain and a skin rash. The pain can be very severe, hence the disease’s […]