Abangares was created on 4 June 1915 by decree 13.[1]
Geography
Abangares has an area of 675.76 km2[4] and a mean elevation of 154 metres.[2]
The canton begins on the coastline of the Gulf of Nicoya north of the mouth of the Abangares River. It widens between the Lajas River on the northwest and Lagartos River on the east as it reaches up into the Cordillera de Tilarán.
Districts
The canton of Abangares is subdivided into the following districts:
One of the canton's major modern producers of gold, with silver as a by-product, has been the Tres Hermanos mine, which for many years was operated by El Valiente Ascari S.A., a subsidiary of Ariel Resources Ltd. of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.[10] That company filed for insolvency in 2001 and abandoned the operation while still owing its workers two months worth of wages.[8] More than 300 families continue to earn a meager living working through an independent local collective that now operates the mine.[8]
A mining museum at La Sierra de Abangares with artifacts from the boom times of Costa Rican gold mining is a major tourist attraction of the canton.[11]
^Doan, David B. (1996). "THE MINERAL INDUSTRY OF COSTA RICA"(PDF). U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY—MINERALS INFORMATION. U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. Department of the Interior. Retrieved 2007-09-08.