Caucete Department
Caucete is a department in the eastern part of the San Juan Province of Argentina, which is predominantly a landscape of mountains, and many plantations. It contains the popular Shrine of the Difunta Correa.
Etymology
The name is derived from the Tehuelche word "caucete", meaning "land or land where he dwells".History
When the Spanish arrived, the area of Caucete, was occupied by the Huarpes, in a settlement in the vicinity of Pie de Palo. Nearly three centuries later, to establish a colony with American population, Amman Rawson asked the government for these lands, which were awarded in 1824. Rawson, the father of William Rawson, chaired the Founding Society of Caucete, which divided the land into 25 blocks, each further bifurcated into two parts, through a ditch central allowed to hold irrigation in the plot. The colony began to be populated, but with the people in the area, not American immigration.Subsequently, Benavides, through the Regulation Irrigation 1851, divided the province into nine sections, one of which was Caucete. Through its Departmental Commission and with the support of the neighborhood, the new section proposed a project for the foundation of a villa. Thus was born Villa Independence, by the decree of November 15, 1851.
Geography
The department Caucete is located in the southeast of the San Juan Province, 28 kilometers east of San Juan. It is 7,502 km ² in area. The village head is Caucete. Its boundaries are:- To the north, the department Jáchal
- To the south, the 25 de Mayo and San Luis Province
- To the east, the Valle Fértil and La [Rioja Province, Argentina|La Rioja province]
- To the west, the 9 de Julio, San Juan San Martin">San Juan Province, Argentina">San Juan San Martin and Angaco departments
Ecology