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Published byMyron Tyler Modified over 9 years ago
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Central America and Caribbean Today
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The Impact of Tourism
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1.1 - Impact of Tourism Positive effects Global jobs: airlines, cruise ships, advertising, travel agencies, hotels and resorts, and street vendors Negative effects Loss of resources for the local population( electricity, water and food) Pollution( both air and water ) Loss of habitat for animals Loss of culture( fast food, traditional jobs and many other aspects)
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Efforts to off set damage Use of recyclable materials Conservation of energy( both fuel and electricity) Water conservation Donations by tourists to plant trees, stop pollution and improve overall conservation
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1.2- Caribbean Food and Music Food – Fusion of native Taino foods with European, African and Asian cuisine. – Basic foods: rice, beans, yams, peppers, plantains and avocadoes. Meat is primarily chicken and fish – Jamaica Use jerk seasoning to preserve meats – Most natives had a healthy diet of fruits and vegetables – 1990s open trade introduced fast food restaurants
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Music Mix of native wind instruments and European string instruments – Calypso- folk music with simple rhythms and local language which tells a story – Soca- mixture of calypso and East Indian music – Salsa- Afro-Cuban mixed with jazz – Merengue- fast rhythmic beats – Ska- 1950s, mix of calypso, jazz and blues – Reggae-1960s, mix of Ska and rock steady
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1.3 Panama Canal 1500s – Spanish wanted to create an artificial water route or canal to reduce shipping time from Europe to the Pacific Ocean 1855- U.S. completes railroad across Panama 1881-1889- French company tries to build a canal, but plan collapses 1900 -1903- U.S. helps Panama liberate itself from Columbia, in exchange U.S. receives canal rights
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1.3 Panama Canal 1904- 1914- U.S. builds the canal – Problems: Mosquitoes- carry many diseases Panama’s physical features: swamps, mountains and jungles 20,000 men die during construction – Benefit 51 miles long instead of 1000s of miles around South America – 2006 – Panama voted to expand the canal to accommodate larger ships and reduce traffic problems
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