El Salvador is the smallest country in Central America and is smaller than the state ofMassachusetts. This mountainous country is bordered by the Pacific Ocean,Guatemala, andHonduras.

Known as the Land of Volcanoes, El Salvador has frequent earthquakes and volcanic activity. It is the only country in Central America that does not have a coastline on the Caribbean Sea.

Map created by National Geographic Maps

About half of all Salvadorans live in the countryside. They are poor and don’t have electricity or running water in their homes. Most of the wealthy families live in San Salvador in houses and apartments.

The government offers free education to children up to the ninth grade, but many families cannot afford the cost of supplies and transportation.

About three million Salvadorans live in theUnited States and send money home to El Salvador.

About 90 percent of Salvadorans are mestizo, descendants of Spanish and Indian ancestors. Nine percent claim Spanish descent.

Rice, beans, and tortillas are the main foods in El Salvador. Most people cannot afford meat and do not have enough food to eat every day. Malnutrition is a leading cause of death among the poor rural people.

Soccer is very popular in El Salvador.

NATURE

The forests of El Salvador have been cut down for firewood, coffee plantations, and for the building of homes. The result is the destruction of wildlife habitats in El Salvador.

Along the coastal plains, there are palm trees and tropical fruit trees, such as mango, coconut, and tamarind.Armadillos, snakes, and iguanas also inhabit the warm, humid coast.

High in the mountains, at the 7,931-foot (2,417-meter) summit of Monte Cristo Mountain, is a cloud forest in the international nature preserve of El Trifinio. The governments ofGuatemala, El Salvador, andHonduras are trying to protect this rain forest.

The cloud forest is home to orchids, ferns,spider monkeys,jaguars, anteaters, and manybird species, including green toucans.

The Olmecs came to the region in 2000 B.C., followed by the Maya in 1500 B.C. When the Maya civilization ended in 900 A.D., the Toltec Empire took hold in El Salvador. In the 11th century, the Pipil people became the dominant group in El Salvador until the Spanish conquerors landed.

The Spanish took over in 1528 and forced the native people to become servants. El Salvador achieved independence fromSpain in 1821 and full independence in 1841.

Economic inequality led to the civil war in 1980. Many Salvadorans, rich and poor, fled to theUnited States. The 12-year civil war, which cost about 75,000 lives, ended in 1992 when the government and leftist rebels signed a treaty that provided for military and political reforms.

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