Casanare ( Spanish pronunciation: [kasaˈnaɾe] , Spanish : Departamento de Casanare ) is a department located in the central eastern of Colombia . It is famous for its oil and natural gas production as well as its livestock and extensive plains. It is also the tenth largest department with an area of 44,490 km, similar to that of Denmark , but also the seventh least densely populated.
6-1764: Its capital is Yopal , which is also the episcopal seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Yopal . It contains oil fields and an 800 km pipeline leading to the coastal port of Coveñas owned by BP . The Upía River (Río Upía) is in Casanare. Casanare, Ariporo, Guachiría, Guanapalo, Pauto, Tocaría, Cravo Sur, Cusiana, Túa y Upía. A former subregion of Boyacá, Casanare became separate department in 1973. [REDACTED] Amazonas [REDACTED] Antioquia [REDACTED] Arauca [REDACTED] Atlántico [REDACTED] Bolívar [REDACTED] Boyacá [REDACTED] Caldas [REDACTED] Caquetá [REDACTED] Casanare [REDACTED] Cauca [REDACTED] Cesar [REDACTED] Chocó [REDACTED] Córdoba [REDACTED] Cundinamarca [REDACTED] Guainía [REDACTED] Guaviare [REDACTED] Huila [REDACTED] La Guajira [REDACTED] Magdalena [REDACTED] Meta [REDACTED] Nariño [REDACTED] N. Santander [REDACTED] Putumayo [REDACTED] Quindío [REDACTED] Risaralda [REDACTED] San Andrés [REDACTED] Santander [REDACTED] Sucre [REDACTED] Tolima [REDACTED] Valle del Cauca [REDACTED] Vaupés [REDACTED] Vichada Capital district: [REDACTED] Bogotá This Department of Casanare location article
12-630: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Yopal Yopal ( Spanish pronunciation: [ɟʝoˈpal] ) is a municipality and capital city of the department of Casanare in Colombia and the second most populated and important city in the Orinoquía region after Villavicencio . Before the period of the Spanish colonization of the Americas , the land on which Yopal stands
18-415: Is famous for its oil and natural gas production as well as its livestock and extensive plains. It is also the tenth largest department with an area of 44,490 km , similar to that of Denmark , but also the seventh least densely populated. Its capital is Yopal , which is also the episcopal seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Yopal . It contains oil fields and an 800 km pipeline leading to
24-1468: The coastal port of Coveñas owned by BP . The Upía River (Río Upía) is in Casanare. Casanare, Ariporo, Guachiría, Guanapalo, Pauto, Tocaría, Cravo Sur, Cusiana, Túa y Upía. A former subregion of Boyacá, Casanare became separate department in 1973. [REDACTED] Amazonas [REDACTED] Antioquia [REDACTED] Arauca [REDACTED] Atlántico [REDACTED] Bolívar [REDACTED] Boyacá [REDACTED] Caldas [REDACTED] Caquetá [REDACTED] Casanare [REDACTED] Cauca [REDACTED] Cesar [REDACTED] Chocó [REDACTED] Córdoba [REDACTED] Cundinamarca [REDACTED] Guainía [REDACTED] Guaviare [REDACTED] Huila [REDACTED] La Guajira [REDACTED] Magdalena [REDACTED] Meta [REDACTED] Nariño [REDACTED] N. Santander [REDACTED] Putumayo [REDACTED] Quindío [REDACTED] Risaralda [REDACTED] San Andrés [REDACTED] Santander [REDACTED] Sucre [REDACTED] Tolima [REDACTED] Valle del Cauca [REDACTED] Vaupés [REDACTED] Vichada Capital district: [REDACTED] Bogotá This Department of Casanare location article
30-413: The months of December to March, and a very long wet season covering the remaining eight months. This Department of Casanare location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Department of Casanare Casanare ( Spanish pronunciation: [kasaˈnaɾe] , Spanish : Departamento de Casanare ) is a department located in the central eastern of Colombia . It
36-408: Was occupied by the indigenous Achagua people . The name Yopal descends from the region's abundance of Anadenanthera peregrina , often otherwise called yopo. Yopal has a tropical monsoon climate (Köppen Am ). Although it borders closely on a tropical savanna climate ( Aw ), Yopal’s climate is much more typical of a tropical monsoon climate in having a short but distinct dry season that covers
#815184