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At first sight, the capital of the state
of Mato Grosso is a city that is relatively peaceful, flat
and planted with trees where traces of the colonial past mingle with present day development
which, thanks to its university, has led the city has become
a major center for learning. But it is much more than that.
Intersected by the River Cuiabá, the city was the destination
of explorers and adventurers who in the 18th and 19th centuries
set out from São Paulo on river expeditions, sailing
up the River Tietê and the network of tributaries of
the Rivers Paraná and Paraguay to the River Cuiabá,
settling in the center of Brazil, setting up trading posts
and going in search of the region's abundant gold reserves.
Dating from those times, the city has churches
such as the Rosário, built by slaves in 1722 and where the high altar is painted in
gold; there is also the Pedras Ramis Bucair Museum housed in an
former mansion where in addition to a display of stones, there
are around 4,000 archaeological exhibits, including the femur of
a 120 million year old tyrannosaurus and stone axes dating from
the neolithic period, found in the region. Also from the past,
the city preserves traditions such as the Festival of São Benedito.
From the city of Cuiabá, and almost as an extension to it,
it is possible to make out the Chapada do Guimarães a place
that is steeped in mystery, with crags and canyons that appear
to transform the sandstone mountains into a city of stone. On certain
days of the year when the Chapada is covered in snow, walking around
there is like being on a film set, wandering amongst typical trees
of the Cerrado, (scrublands) with their twisted, leafless trunks,
decorated with the whitish air of a Sherlock Holmes novel. This
scenario, which is also where the rivers rise before flowing into
the Amazon Basin to the north and the River Plate Basin to the
south, has helped create the mystique that in the Chapada it is
possible to regenerate energy and that even the UFOs (Unidentified
Flying Objects)s were attracted by it - there is even an "Ufoport" at
its highest point, the Morro de São Gerônimo.
A remarkable city on account of its cuisine
based on fish from the rivers of the region, Cuiabá is also one of the ports
for the Pantanal, (marshlands) by means of the roads that lead
to Porto Jofre or to Poconé and Águas Quentes, a
town where the waterfalls, mountain climate and thermal springs
at temperatures between 32 and 42 ºC, delight the visitors.
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