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This is a list of supermarket chains in South America. The largest supermarket chains originating from the continent are Éxito and Tía . International chains are also present, such as Walmart and Carrefour .
San Miguelito is a city and district (distrito) of Panamá Province in Panama. The population according to the 2000 census was 293,745; [2] the latest official estimate (for 2019) is 375,409. [1] The district covers an area of 50.1 km².
El Fuerte de Samaipata, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Bolivia; El Fuerte, Sinaloa, a city of Sinaloa, Mexico; El Fuerte, a character in the Street Fighter video game series; Fuerte may also refer to: "bolívar fuerte", the official name of the Venezuelan bolívar; Fuerte River, a river in Sinaloa, Mexico; Fuerte, a variety of avocado
El Fuerte – a former fortress made into a hotel in the 1950s – offers direct access to the beach and is a five-minute walk from Marbella’s charming Old Town, which is a hotspot for ...
Portobelo (Modern Spanish: "Puerto Bello" ("beautiful port"), historically in Portuguese: Porto Belo) is a historic port and corregimiento in Portobelo District, Colón Province, Panama. Located on the northern part of the Isthmus of Panama, it is 32 km (20 mi) northeast of the modern port of Colón now at the Atlantic entrance to the Panama Canal.
El Fuerte was a chief trading post for silver miners and gold seekers from the Urique and Batopilas mines in the nearby mountains of the Sierra Madre Occidental and its branches. [ citation needed ] In 1824, El Fuerte became the capital city of the newly created Mexican state of Sonora y Sinaloa (reaching up deep into modern-day Arizona).
Created in 2001, Mariato District is a district (distrito) in the southeastern corner of Veraguas Province in Panama. The district seat is the town of Llano del Catival, also known simply as Mariato. Geographically, the district totaling 1,381 km 2 (533 sq mi) comprises the west-facing coast of the Azuero peninsula fronting the Gulf of Montijo.
A Spanish fort (Fuerte de San Geronimo de Yaviza) was built in 1760, and heavily damaged by an attack of the Indigenous Guna in 1780. [4] A flood destroyed half of the remaining ruins in the mid-20th century. [5] Map of the Darién Gap and the break in the Pan-American Highway between Yaviza, Panama and Turbo, Colombia