Province of Huelva
Huelva is a province of southern Spain, in the western part of the autonomous community of Andalusia. It is bordered by Portugal, the provinces of Badajoz, Seville, and Cádiz, and the Atlantic Ocean. Its capital is Huelva.
Its area is 10,148 km2. Its population is 483,792, of whom about 30% live in the capital, and its population density is 47.67/km2. It contains 79 municipalities.
The economy is based on agriculture and mining. The famous Rio Tinto mines have been worked since before 1000 BC, and were the major source of copper for the Roman Empire. As an indication of the scope of ancient mining, sixteen million tons of Roman slag have been identified at the Roman mines. The Rio Tinto Company Limited resumed large-scale mining in 1873; the district is the namesake of the Rio Tinto Group.
In the 21st century, municipalities such as Moguer, Palos de la Frontera, and Lepe, have witnessed the development of intensive water-demanding strawberry farming, which has elicited attention on the basis of alleged mispractices and abuses regarding the labor conditions of foreign workers and the ecocidal depletion of water resources in Doñana.
The province contains Palos de la Frontera, and Moguer, where Christopher Columbus sailed out of on his first voyage in 1492, and shares the Parque Nacional de Doñana, located mainly in Almonte.
Population
The historical population is given in the following chart:Colors=
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ImageSize = width:400 height:auto barincrement:30
PlotArea = left:40 bottom:40 top:20 right:20
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Period = from:0 till:550
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color:skyblue width:20 shift: fontsize:M anchor:till
bar:1877 from:0 till:209 text:209,194
bar:1887 from:0 till:240 text:240,067
bar:1900 from:0 till:258 text:258,143
bar:1910 from:0 till:296 text:295,898
bar:1920 from:0 till:332 text:331,527
bar:1930 from:0 till:355 text:355,441
bar:1940 from:0 till:375 text:375,180
bar:1950 from:0 till:370 text:369,722
bar:1960 from:0 till:405 text:404,517
bar:1970 from:0 till:403 text:403,405
bar:1980 from:0 till:419 text:418,584
bar:1990 from:0 till:443 text:443,476
bar:2000 from:0 till:463 text:462,579
bar:2010 from:0 till:520 text:519,895
bar:2020 from:0 till:524 text:524,278
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pos: fontsize:M
text:"Source: Instituto Nacional de Estadística, INE"
Tourism
The delayed tourist development of the province has allowed better city planning than in other regions on the Spanish coast. The nuclei of Islantilla and Isla Canela are an example of this attempt to plan in a more coherent form. Although in a smaller scale in comparison to other regions, urban pressure continues. Previous developments that had little planning until recent time are El Rompido, El Portil, Mazagón and Matalascañas.Although Punta Umbría had its beginnings like pedanía de Cartaya, after the democratization of summer tourism, it began its urban development for its proximity to the capital and its location on the beach. Present development would not endure without tourist activity and its vacation housing. Other tourist areas are Nuevo Umbría, Nuevo Portil, Punta del Moral, La Antilla and Urbasur. The marismas de Isla Cristina, next to the towns of Ayamonte and Isla Cristina, are a protected nature reserve. In the mountain town of Almonaster la Real, the Visigothic-mosque church built in the first decades of the 10th century and whose mihrab is one of the oldest in Spain is one important turistic point.
Of note is Huelva's recent classification of “rural tourism” for its interior mountain range.