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Las_Toninas Latitude and Longitude:

36°29′S 56°42′W / 36.483°S 56.700°W / -36.483; -56.700
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Las Toninas
Las Toninas Maze
Las Toninas Maze
Las Toninas is located in Buenos Aires Province
Las Toninas
Las Toninas
Las Toninas is located in Argentina
Las Toninas
Las Toninas
Las Toninas (Argentina)
Coordinates: 36°29′S 56°42′W / 36.483°S 56.700°W / -36.483; -56.700
Country  Argentina
Province Buenos Aires
Partido La Costa
Elevation
17 m (56 ft)
Population
 (2001 census [ INDEC)
 • Total3,550
CPA Base
B 7106
Area code+ 54 2246
Website http://lacosta.gob.ar/lugares_interes?localidad=5496

Las Toninas is a town in La Costa Partido of the Province of Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Overview

Founded in 1960, Las Toninas was christened in honor of the Commerson's dolphin (known locally as a tonina). The shore had been the site of a shipwreck in 1883 of a commercial vessel registered in the British Empire, whose captain settled nearby and established the Estancia Los Ingleses. [1]

The shore at Las Toninas is distinguishable from its sister communities' by the extensive growth of tamarix bushes. These were used to create a hedge maze as a tourist attraction, and the 6,400 m2 (16,000 ft2) maze is touted locally as the nation's largest. [2]

Las Toninas is also known as the "Fiber Optical Capital" in Argentina;[ citation needed] because it is the single point where submarine optical fiber networks reach Argentina via several landing cable stations, by companies such as Level 3 (with its SAC ring), TIWS (Atlantis 2), Telecom-Antel (Bicentenario cable system), and Telefónica (SAM 1). The town was chosen because its coastline was not as rocky as others in the region. [3]

Notes and references

  1. ^ Viajo por Argentina: Ruta Provincial 11 (in Spanish)
  2. ^ "Crónica de una visita al laberinto de Las Toninas (Argentina) (Chronicle of a visit to the Las Toninas Maze)" (in Spanish). October 2007. Archived from the original on 11 October 2012.
  3. ^ Bederman, Uriel (4 June 2015). "Las Toninas: la puerta submarina por la que el país se conecta a Internet". La Nación (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 4 June 2015.