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In early 19th-century Argentina, farmers let their cows and sheep roam freely across the country’s vast plains. Having realized that such a system was inefficient, around the 1880s they began ...
Out of a prison cell on the outskirts of Buenos Aires last week marched Enrique P. Oses, editor of the swaggering, German-financed, openly Nazi El Pampero, enjoying a temporary freedom on bail. For ...
The hotel is on the outskirts of San Antonio de Areco, a rural gaucho (cowboy) town some 80 miles from Buenos Aires, popular with tourists visiting the capital and, since the start of the pandemic ...
So-called clandestine canals built by farmers to protect their crops are often blamed for exacerbating devastation across Argentina's naturally flood-prone pampas grains and cattle belt.
CARLOS CASARES, Argentina -- Oscar Alcaraz used to mend fences out on the Pampas, where cattle have grazed for centuries. But months of unusually heavy rains have flooded millions of acres in the ...
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