Mexico (stat)

For alternative betydninger, se Mexico (flertydig). (Se også artikler, som begynder med Mexico)
Mexico (stat)
Estado de México Rediger på Wikidata
Mexico (stat)'s byvåben
Overblik
Land Mexico
HovedstadToluca de Lerdo
GuvernørAlfredo del Mazo Maza Rediger på Wikidata
Grundlagt1823 Rediger på Wikidata
Postnr.50-57 Rediger på Wikidata
Demografi
Indbyggere16.187.608 (2015)[1] Rediger på Wikidata
 - Areal22.351 km²
 - Befolknings­tæthed724 pr. km²
Andet
TidszoneUTC−06:00 Rediger på Wikidata
Højde m.o.h.2.605 m Rediger på Wikidata
Hjemmesidewww.edomexico.gob.mx
Oversigtskort
Delstaten Mexicos beliggenhed i Mexico
Delstaten Mexicos beliggenhed i Mexico
Torres de Satélite i kommunen Naucalpan

Delstaten Mexico (ofte forkortet til "Edomex" for Estado de México) er en delstat i midten af landet af samme navn, Mexico. Den er mod nord afgrænset af Hidalgo, mod øst af Tlaxcala og Puebla, mod syd af Morelos og Guerrero og mod vest af Michoacan. Delstaten Mexico dækker et areal på 21.461 km². I 2003 havde delstaten et anslået indbyggertal på omkring 14.030.000, mens indbyggertallet i 1900 var 934.468 og overvejende bestod af indianere.

Referencer

Spire
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19°21′15″N 99°37′51″V / 19.3542°N 99.6308°V / 19.3542; -99.6308

Medier brugt på denne side

Coat of arms of Mexico State.svg
Coat of arms of Mexico State
Mexico City ESA412648.jpg
(c) ESA, CC BY-SA IGO 3.0
The Copernicus Sentinel-1 mission takes us over Mexico City. This huge, densely-populated capital can be seen in the top right of the image. It is home to almost nine million people, with the Greater Mexico City area recording a population of over 21 million. This makes it the largest Spanish-speaking city in the world.

This striking image has been created using three Copernicus Sentinel-1 acquisitions from 28 July, 27 August and 26 September 2018, overlaid in red, green and blue, respectively. Where we see explosions of colour, changes have occurred between the different acquisitions. In the left of the image, three bodies of water are shown in black: Villa Victoria, Valle de Bravo, and Tepetitlán. Water is significant to the development of Mexico City, which is thought to have been built over a lake by the Aztecs around 1325. Today, the city finds itself in a precarious situation in terms of water supply in spite of the regular flash floods and heavy rainfall it experiences during the wet season from June and September. In the top right, we can see the round structure of El Caracol meaning ‘the snail’ in Spanish. Currently used as a reservoir for industrial facilities within Mexico City, there are plans for this to become a wastewater treatment plant. A 62 km-long sewer tunnel is also due to begin operating this year.  The Cumbres del Ajusco national park is shown to the southwest of the capital, in an area of the image that shows colourful dots forming a circle. Famous for being up to almost 4000 m above sea level at its highest elevation, it is one of many national parks surrounding the capital. Volcanoes are also dotted around this area. Popocatépetl, to the south east of Mexico City, last erupted in September 2018. Sentinel-1 is a two-satellite mission to supply the coverage and data delivery needed for Europe’s Copernicus environmental monitoring programme. The satellites each carry an advanced radar instrument to provide an all-weather, day-and-night supply of imagery of Earth’s surface.

This image is also featured on theEarth from Space video programme.
Torres satelite.jpg
Forfatter/Opretter: Hector Gomez (https://www.flickr.com/people/hectoregm/), Licens: CC BY-SA 2.0
Sculpture Torres de Satélite (1957/8) by Luis Barragán and Mathias Goeritz, in Mexico City; Torres de Satélite, México, D. F.; por Luis Barragán en colaboración con Mathias Goeritz.
Mexico Flag Map.svg
(c) Lokal_Profil, CC BY-SA 2.5
Map showing Mexico with a superimposed Mexico Empire flag.
Mexico states méxico.png
Forfatter/Opretter: unknown, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0