ECUADOR


Meaning of ECUADOR in English

n.

officially Republic of Ecuador

Country, northwestern South America.

Area: 105,037 sq mi (272,045 sq km), including the Galápagos Islands . Population (2002 est.): 13,095,000. Capital: Quito . About two-fifths of the population are Indian (mostly Quechua ), and two-fifths are mestizo (mixed European and Indian); most of the rest are of Spanish ancestry. Language: Spanish (official). Religion: predominantly Roman Catholicism. Currency: U.S. dollar. Pacific coastal lowlands rise to the peaks and highlands of the Andes Mountains , which give way to the Ecuadoran portion of the tropical Amazon River basin in the east. The Andes rise dramatically in two chains that run north to south and are separated by high valleys. The highest peak is Chimborazo , which rises to an elevation of 20,561 ft (6,267 m); nearby Cotopaxi , 19,347 ft (5,897 m) high, is the world's highest active volcano. The country lies in an active earthquake zone and is prone to violent seismic activity. Almost half the land is forested, with tropical rainforests in the east. Ecuador straddles the Equator. Its climate varies from tropical in the lowlands to temperate in the highlands. It has a developing economy based primarily on services, followed by manufacturing and agriculture. Principal exports include crude petroleum, bananas, and shellfish. It is a republic with one legislative house; its head of state and government is the president. What is now Ecuador was conquered by the Inca s in 1450 and came under Spanish control in 1534. Under the Spaniards it was a part of the Viceroyalty of Peru until 1740, when it became a part of the Viceroyalty of New Granada . It gained its independence from Spain in 1822 as part of the republic of Gran Colombia and in 1830 became a sovereign state. A succession of authoritarian governments ruled into the mid-20th century, and the military played a prominent role in politics. Border disputes led to war with Peru in 1941; conflicts with that country continued periodically until a final demarcation of the border in 1998. The economy thrived during the 1970s due to large profits from petroleum exports but was depressed in the 1980s because of lower oil prices. In the 1990s social unrest caused political instability and several changes in the presidency. In a controversial move to help stabilize the economy, the U.S. dollar replaced the sucre as the national currency in 2000.

Britannica Concise Encyclopedia.      Краткая энциклопедия Британика.