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| Tangará da Serra | |
|---|---|
| Name | Tangará da Serra |
| Settlement type | Municipality |
| Subdivision type | Country |
| Subdivision name | Brazil |
| Subdivision type1 | Region |
| Subdivision name1 | Central-West Region, Brazil |
| Subdivision type2 | State |
| Subdivision name2 | Mato Grosso |
| Established title | Founded |
| Established date | 1979 |
| Area total km2 | 3,080 |
| Population total | 103,000 |
| Population as of | 2020 |
| Timezone | Brasília Time |
Tangará da Serra is a municipality in the Mato Grosso state of Brazil, located in the Central-West Region, Brazil. It functions as a regional hub for agribusiness, transport, and services, connecting rural districts to urban centers like Cuiabá and Rondonópolis. The city occupies a transitional zone between the Cerrado and Amazon rainforest biomes and serves as a gateway to conservation areas and hydrographic basins such as the Paraguay River and Araguaia River systems.
The settlement developed during the mid-20th century alongside colonization waves associated with the Brazilian Miracle, the March to the West initiative, and policies from the National Integration Plan (Plano de Integração Nacional). Early settlers were migrants from Minas Gerais, São Paulo, Paraná, and Rio Grande do Sul who participated in land occupation programs similar to those that shaped Brasília and frontier towns in Acre. Agricultural expansion paralleled infrastructure projects like the extension of road networks related to the BR-163 corridor and the Cuiabá-Santarém highway discourse. Local governance traces to municipal emancipation movements seen in other Mato Grosso municipalities, modeled after administrative patterns in Campo Grande, Uberlândia, and São José do Rio Preto.
Tangará da Serra sits on the Brazilian Highlands plateau within the Guimarães and Parecis ranges' influence, near Chapada dos Guimarães formations. The municipality lies within the Xingu River and Tapajós River hydrographic contexts and adjoins ecosystems comparable to Serra do Cachimbo and Pantanal. The climate is classified under systems used by the Köppen climate classification for the region, showing a tropical savanna pattern similar to that in Cuiabá, with marked wet and dry seasons influenced by the South Atlantic Convergence Zone and Intertropical Convergence Zone shifts. Soil profiles resemble those of cerrado regions studied in research by institutions like Embrapa and universities such as the Federal University of Mato Grosso (UFMT) and University of São Paulo.
Population dynamics reflect migration trends common to frontier municipalities influenced by agrarian settlements and urbanization processes similar to Sinop, Mato Grosso and Sorriso. Census patterns align with projections used by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics and demographic studies by IBGE, showing a mixed population of descendants from migrants originating in Northeast Region, Brazil states, Minas Gerais, and São Paulo. Ethnic composition includes communities with ancestry linking to Portuguese people in Brazil, Indigenous peoples in Brazil groups present in Mato Grosso, and settlers connected to Italians in Brazil and Germans in Brazil. Religious affiliations mirror patterns reported by national surveys involving Roman Catholicism in Brazil, Protestantism in Brazil, and Afro-Brazilian faiths documented in studies by the Ministry of Culture.
Economic activity centers on agribusiness commodities such as soybeans, corn, cattle ranching, and logging, following commodity chains observed in Santarém and Cuiabá. Local producers engage with supply networks linked to ports like Port of Santos and logistics corridors tied to the BR-364 and BR-163 highways. Financial services and trade connect to regional banks such as the Banco do Brasil and development programs administered by agencies like the National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES). The municipality participates in market dynamics comparable to those affecting Sorriso, Mato Grosso and Lucas do Rio Verde, interfacing with agribusiness corporations like Amaggi, Bunge Limited, and exporters active in Mato Grosso.
Transport infrastructure includes road links to major arteries such as the BR-163 and BR-364 and local air service at a municipal airport analogous to regional facilities in Sinop, Mato Grosso and Rondonópolis. Logistics nodes coordinate with rail proposals considered in federal transport planning by the Ministry of Infrastructure (Brazil), and freight movements interact with inland waterway initiatives along river basins like the Teles Pires River. Public utilities and urban planning references mirror standards set by agencies such as ANA (National Water Agency) and utility regulators including the National Electric Energy Agency (ANEEL). Waste management and sanitation developments have been part of programs funded through federal mechanisms akin to the Programa de Aceleração do Crescimento.
Educational institutions include municipal schools following curricula aligned with directives from the Ministry of Education (Brazil) and networks of technical training comparable to those offered by the S System (SENAI, SESC) and state vocational centers. Higher education outreach includes campus programs and partnerships with the Federal University of Mato Grosso (UFMT) and private institutions similar to the Centro Universitário de Várzea Grande (UNIVAG)]. Healthcare services are provided by municipal hospitals and clinics operating within systems regulated by the Ministry of Health (Brazil) and integrated into programs like the Unified Health System (SUS), with referrals to tertiary centers in Cuiabá and specialist services found in regional capitals.
Cultural life mixes regional festivities influenced by traditions from Minas Gerais, São Paulo, and Nordeste Region, Brazil migrants, with events comparable to municipal celebrations in Cuiabá and Chapada dos Guimarães. Tourist attractions include natural sites resembling those in the Chapada dos Guimarães National Park, waterfalls and river canyons akin to features in Nobres (Mato Grosso), and ecotourism initiatives similar to community projects in Bonito. Local cultural institutions collaborate with state agencies such as the Secretary of State for Culture (Mato Grosso) and conservation organizations including ICMBio for protected area management.
Category:Municipalities in Mato Grosso