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Description
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Three
hundred and sixty five days of sunshine and an average annual
temperature of 26Ί C make Rio Grande do Norte a highly privileged
state. This is not only on account of its natural features such
as beautiful beaches and dunes along its 400 kilometre coastline,
but also because its air is the purest in the whole of Latin America,
according to reports by NASA and the National Space Research Institute
(INPE) from investigations completed in 1992.
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Despite
its many attractions, tourism only really developed in Rio Grande
do Norte during the 1980s, with the construction in the state
capital, Natal,
of the Via Costeira, an eight kilometre avenue running along the
coast where the city's main hotels and restaurants are situated.
Since then the Government has been investing in the tourist industry,
improving the infrastructure and conserving the natural heritage.
One of the main steps was the establishing of the Dunes State
Park for the preservation of the series of sand dunes that surround
the capital. Natal is the gateway to the state's beaches, many
of which are semi wild, such as Pipa and Pirangi, whilst others,
such as Genipabu, are more commercialized.
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The
region was cleared by the French between 1535 and 1598 and it
was not long before the Portuguese and Dutch began to dispute
ownership of the area. As a result, settlement was slow and only
really started in 1633 when the territory came under the control
of the Dutch who started to develop the production of salt, sugar-cane
and beef cattle. Thanks to this, the state now accounts for 87%
of the total production of Brazil's sea salt, with an installed
capacity of around 5 million tons, only 42% of the production
potential, calculated as being 12 million tons.
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In
Rio Grande do Norte, oil production is also important. Extracting
a daily average of 100,000 barrels, the state is in second place
nationally in terms of marine extraction, losing only to the town
of Campos in Rio de Janeiro. The majority of oil wells and the
largest salt-pans are situated in the state's second largest city,
Mossorσ, about 80 kilometres from Natal.
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It
was a cashew tree that enabled the state to feature in the Guinness
Book of Records. The 92 year-old tree is to be found on the beach
at Pirangi do Norte, 24 kilometres from Natal, and is the world's
largest cashew tree with a circumference of 500 metres, occupying
an area of 7,300 m2. Its branches are equivalent to 70 cashew
trees yet it is just one single tree.
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Pirangi
do Norte is situated in Parnamirim, a city on which artisan lace
production is centred. With great patience and speed, the lace-makers
interweave fine cotton threads to produce tablecloths, bedspreads
and clothing. As well as this, the visitor to Parnamirim cannot
miss the Barreira do Inferno, the first rocket-launching base
in Latin America.
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