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Esc. Sec. Gral. Ing. Jorge L.

Tamayo

Tehuacn and 5 Regions

Ariadna Michelle Cisneros Posada Teacher:Brenda Yamel Zenteno B. English Esc. Sec. Gral. Ing. Jorge L. Tamayo

Dedication

This work is dedicated to my parents and everyone in this beautiful city of Tehuacn.

Rationale

I'm doing this job mainly because I was asked at school but also because I want people around the world know my city and its five regions, plus I know their beauty and the attractions it has.

Introduction

This paper will discuss the 5 regions of Tehuacn and besides they were on different events that happened, and all the wonders that this city and its surroundings.

Geographical location

Annotations Sierra Mixteca Montaa Joya Valle

Tehuacn

Tehuacn is the second largest city in the Mexican state of Puebla, nestled in the Southeast Valley of Tehuacn, bordering the states of Oaxaca and Veracruz. The 2010 census reported a population of 248,716 in the city and 274,906 in its surrounding municipality of the same name, of which it serves as municipal seat. The municipality has an area of 390.36 km (150.72 sq mi). Originally a Native American settlement, it became officially a city in the Viceroyalty of New Spain in 1660. According to the archaeologist Richard Stockton MacNeish, the Valley of Tehuacn is the first place maize was ever cultivated by humankind. He arrived at this conclusion when he found over 10,000 teoscintle cobs in what is now known as the Cave of Coxcatlan. In the late nineteenth century, the city was well known for its mineral springs. In fact, Peafiel (now owned by Cadbury Schweppes), a well known soft drinks manufacturer, extracts water from these wells for use in their products. Tehuacn also has an important cluster of poultry producers, making the city and its surroundings one of the most important egg producing regions in Mexico. Historically, the Valley of Tehuacn is important to the whole of Mexico, as the most ancient forms of cultivated maize known were found here by archeologists.

Glyph of Tehuacn

This is the currently accepted glyph city of Tehuacn. It is based on the work of Felipe Franco's 1946 Geographic Indonimia Puebla State, same as inferred from the word Teohuacan, ie instead of gods or the sun. The glyph is interpreted as follows: At the bottom you can see a gum with teeth, which means "place". The album is a solar symbol, or sacred. Hence, to be known as Tehuacn "City of Gods", "Place of those gods", "Place of those with God" or more currently "Sun City".

Tehuacn "Place of Gods"

The Shield of Tehuacn is made up of four quarters: In the first quarter there is a black eagle on the nopal with two arrows in its right claw and another crossed by its legs, on the left side of the quarter are three maize with spikes of gold which the Indians call "Miahuatl", in a blue field. In the second quarter it shows a Black Eagle in white with a golden beak putting one leg on a teponaxtle and the other lifting two clasped arrows. At the right side of the eagle an ayacaxtle or sonaja is playing an instrument and dancing with the Indians. Just below is a drum, on the left side are two teponaxcle and below sits a Quetzal feather. In the third quarter there is a bush with a red flower on its outspread branches; in the native language the flower is called a "tlaxochitl". Below the tree is a bird digging up a flower, the tree is called a Mezquite. On the right side is a castle on a hill and near it there are white and colored stones, below the castle is a cave. In the fourth quarter there is a decapitated head which is held up by a hand that is reaching out from the right side and is holding the head up by its hair, the left hand is also in the picture and is grasping an arc. In the midst of the four quarters the head of Chimalpopoca and as Cimera, the Virgin of the Conception.

History Tehuacn

Tehuacn is the second largest city in the Mexican state of Puebla, nestled in the Southeast Valley of Tehuacn, bordering the states of Oaxaca and Veracruz. The 2010 census reported a population of 248,716 in the city and 274,906 in its surrounding municipality of the same name, of which it serves as municipal seat. The municipality has an area of 390.36 km (150.72 sq mi). Originally a Native American settlement, it became officially a city in the Viceroyalty of New Spain in 1660. According to the archaeologist Richard Stockton MacNeish, the Valley of Tehuacn is the first place maize was ever cultivated by humankind. He arrived at this conclusion when he found over 10,000 teoscintle cobs in what is now known as the Cave of Coxcatlan. In the late nineteenth century, the city was well known for its mineral springs. In fact, Peafiel (now owned by Cadbury Schweppes), a well known soft drinks manufacturer, extracts water from these wells for use in their products. Tehuacn also has an important cluster of poultry producers, making the city and its surroundings one of the most important egg producing regions in Mexico. After the NAFTA agreement had been signed, Tehuacn saw a flood of textile maquiladoras established in the city and surrounding areas. These textile factories principally put together blue jeans for export to companies such as The Gap, Guess, Old Navy, and JC Penney. At the height of the maquila (short for maquiladora) boom, there were an estimated number of more than 700 maquilas in town, including those that were operating from homes, often in secret. While this situation created a negative unemployment (zero unemployment) and the maquilas sought workers as far away as Orizaba and Crdoba in the neighboring state of Veracruz, it also created an urban and environmental nightmare. In one decade, Tehuacn went from being a town of 150,000 inhabitants to a city of 360,000. Although many maquilas have closed today, in 2007 there were still over 700 of them found in Tehuacn. Due to the poverty of the families living in Tehuacn, child labour in the maquilas is common, and worker's rights are often exploited there. Additionally, chemicals such as caustic soda, chlorine, peroxide, oxalic acid, sodium bisulphate, potassium permanganate, and sodium hexametaphosphate are being discharged into the freshwater supplies by the jean laundries. Despite having new purifying technologies available at certain large facilities, they are still not being used the majority of the time. The water, which contains heavy metals such as mercury, lead, copper, zinc, chrome, cadmium and selenium is then used by the

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farmers to irrigate their land. The cost of environmental deterioration in 2002 was estimated to be $63 billion per year. Historically, the Valley of Tehuacn is important to the whole of Mexico, as the most ancient forms of cultivated maize known were found here by archeologists.

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Bibliography

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tehuacan http://academiatlatoani.blogspot.mx/2010/07/glifo-de-tehuacan.html http://puebla-tehuacan.wexico.com/Tehuacan/Escudo-de-Tehuacan/indexeng.html

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