Geography & Travel

Mar del Plata

Argentina
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Mar del Plata, coastal city, southeastern Buenos Aires provincia (province), east-central Argentina. It is located on the Atlantic Ocean coast about 230 miles (370 km) south-southeast of Buenos Aires city.

Juan de Garay, the second founder of Buenos Aires, first explored the coastal area of Mar del Plata in 1581. In 1746 Father Thomas Falkner and Father José Cardiel founded the Indian work mission Nuestra Señora del Pilar (“Our Lady of Pilar”) at the site of the present-day city. Fear of attack by the Indian chief Cangapol caused the mission to be abandoned in 1751.

The Portuguese explorer José Coelho de Meyrelles, granted land as poblador (settler) of Mar del Plata, colonized the region in 1856, establishing a fishing village, La Peregrina (“The Pilgrim”). Meyrelles started the first meat-salting plant in the area in 1857. Meat salting remained important throughout the Buenos Aires region until the introduction of refrigeration in the late 19th century.

Mar del Plata was founded in 1874, after Patriço Peralta Ramos acquired three landholdings from Meyrelles in 1860 and promoted the sites as a seaside resort. In 1907 Mar del Plata was declared a city and has since that time developed as one of Argentina’s foremost ocean-resort areas.

Mar del Plata’s primary commercial activities revolve around tourism. The city’s 5 miles (8 km) of beaches attract huge crowds during the summer and a large number of people during the remainder of the year as well. The tourist season is from November to mid-April. Mar del Plata is famous for its luxurious casino, one of the largest in the world. After tourism, the chief economic activities are building construction, textiles, and commercial fishing and canning. The National University of Mar del Plata (1961) is located in the city. There are museums of art and natural science. The city is served well by highway, railway, and air transport to Buenos Aires and other major cities of Argentina. Pop. (2001) 541,733; (2010 est.) 594,500.

This article was most recently revised and updated by John M. Cunningham.