Choya, Argentina
Choya is a village and municipality in the Andalgalá Department of Catamarca Province in northwestern Argentina. The town is located on National Route 47. It is located along the.
History
Early mentions of Choya exist in colonial Spanish records. In 1660, Alonso Mercado y Villacorta used his position as Governor of Rio de la Plata to distributed management responsibilities regarding the native peoples in the Andalgalá valley to three trustees, including Gregorio de Villagra. Several families of native Ingamana people were installed in Choya in 1674.Radiocarbon dating has taken place at Choya 68, a site in Choya that was excavated to extract remnants of Aguada Portezuelo ceramic artifacts, dating them to around 1000 AD.
Located south of the Capillitas mine, Choya was one of the localities of Catamarca subjected to intrusion by the MARA project, a brownfield mining initiative. Citizens protesting from Choya and surrounding areas were repressed and arrested by the government, who sought to increase economic activity in the area through resource extraction.