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Nature Attractions In Guadalajara Metropolitan Area

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The Guadalajara metropolitan area is the most populous metropolitan area of the Mexican state of Jalisco and the second largest in the country after Greater Mexico City. It includes the core municipality of Guadalajara and the surrounding municipalities of Zapopan, Tlaquepaque, Tonalá, Tlajomulco de Zúñiga, El Salto, Ixtlahuacán de los Membrillos and Juanacatlán.
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Nature Attractions In Guadalajara Metropolitan Area

  • 1. Zoologico Guadalajara Guadalajara
    Zoológico Guadalajara is the main zoological park in the Mexican city of Guadalajara, Jalisco, and is widely considered the most important in Latin America. It is the largest in the country with respect to species population.
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • 5. El Diente Zapopan
    The Bosque el Nixticuil is an old-growth forest located northwest of the Metropolitan Zone of Guadalajara in the Mexican town of Zapopan. An urban forest, it is encroached by the metropolitan area's constant growth. It is mostly composed of oak, holm oak and pine. It is a remnant of a larger, now vanished, forest of more than 27,000 hectares. Its name comes from a local natural promontory called El Nixticuil.
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • 8. Barranca de Oblatos Guadalajara
    Barranca de Oblatos , also known as Barranca de Huentitán, is a canyon carved by the Río Grande de Santiago in Mexico in the state of Jalisco. It lies on the northeast side of the municipality of Guadalajara and on the edge of the municipalities of Tonalá, Zapotlanejo, Ixtlahuacán del Río and Zapopan in the Guadalajara Metropolitan Area. Its beauty and structure make it a slightly smaller scale version of the Grand Canyon in the United States, and Barranca del Cobre in Chihuahua.It includes approximately 1.137 hectares and it has an average depth of 600 meters. The difference in elevation between the rim of the canyon and the river is 520 meters at the point of a funicular. This canyon is also named Oblatos-Huentitán due to the areas in the city crossed by it, called Oblatos and Huen...
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • 15. Juanacatlan Falls Juanacatlan
    Juanacatlán Falls is a waterfall on the Santiago River in the Mexican state of Jalisco, once known as the Niagara of Mexico. Decreased flow in the Santiago River has left the falls now virtually extinct. About thirty years ago, the falls have been cleaner than ever and plenty of tourists visit it. But, now the falls have been polluted by toxic wastes, chemicals, and garbage from the factories and the near city of Guadalajara. These once-majestic falls, the first Mexican landscape on a postage stamp back in 1899, have been reduced to a trickle of foul-smelling effluent. At the start of the twentieth century, the falls provided hydro-electric power for Guadalajara and turned the wheels of a cotton and woolen mill, the ruins of which now stand to one side. The region of were the Santiago lie...
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

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