Cayo Districtis located in the west part ofBelize,and it contains the capital,Belmopan.It is the most extensive, second-most populous and third-most densely populated of the sixdistrictsof Belize. The district's capital is the town ofSan Ignacio.

Cayo District
Cayo District and its neighbors[a]
Cayo District and its neighbors[a]
CountryBelize
CapitalSan Ignacio
Area
• Total
5,338 km2(2,061 sq mi)
Population
(2024)[1] [2]
• Total
103,413
• Density19/km2(50/sq mi)
Estimate
ISO 3166 codeBZ-CY

Geography

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Being the largest district, it bordersGuatemalato the west,Orange Walk districtto the north,Belizedistrict to the northeast,Stann Creek districtto the southeast andToledo districtto the south. The nation's capital,Belmopan,is located within the district.

Other important towns and cities in the district includeBenque Viejo del Carmen,twin towns ofSan Ignacioand Santa Elena (District's Capital), Seven Miles (El Progreso),San Antonio,Valley of Peace,St. Margaret,Roaring Creek,Armenia,San Jose Succotz,Arenal,Buena Vista,Bullet Tree Falls,Calla Creek,Esperanza,Cristo Rey,Georgeville,Unitedville,Blackman Eddy,Ontario,Camalote,Los Tambos,More TomorrowandSpanish Lookout.

Major rivers in the district include theMacal Riverand theMopan River.

Boundaries

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In 1960, the boundaries of the Cayo District were defined as follows:[3]

Commencing at Big Falls, Belize River; thence upward along the course of the Belize River to Labouring Creek, Yalbac Creek and Tu-Tu Creek to the Western Frontier Line; thence following the Frontier Line southward to the crossing of the main divide or watershed of the Maya Mountains; thence in a north-easterly direction along the main divide of the Maya Mountains which forms the watershed between Machiquila River, Belize River and Sibun River systems on the west and north, and Moho River, Rio Grande, Monkey River, Sittee River and North Stann Creek systems on the east and south to the top of the peak known as Arthur's Seat west of Middlesex; thence by a direct line in a north-north-easterly direction to the highest point on the Humming Bird Highway in the Humming Bird Gap; thence by the southern side of the Humming Bird Highway in a westerly direction to a point 70chainseast of St. Margaret's Creek bridge measured along the Highway; thence in a straight line in a northerly direction to the source of the westernmost tributary of Indian Creek; thence downward along the courses of Indian Creek and Sibun River to the mouth of Nancy Porter Creek; thence in a straight line to the point of commencement.

As of 2020, these are still the boundaries used for the District.[4]

Economy and infrastructure

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Cayo District is primarily an agricultural district, with the chief crops beingcitrusfruit (more specifically, oranges, grapefruit, andtangerine), as well as bananas. Recently, oil was found inSpanish Lookoutand it is now in production.

There are two major highways in the District, theGeorge Price Highway,that runs fromBelize Cityto theGuatemalanborder, and theHummingbird Highwaywhich starts in Belmopan and ends at the juncture of the Coastal Road and theSouthern Highwaythat ends in theStann Creek District.In addition to the ruins listed above there are several other importantnature reservesincluding two National Parks,Blue HoleandGuanacaste National Park.Ecotourismis also an integral part of the region's economy.

Political divisions

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Politically, Cayo is divided into sixconstituencies,described in detail here:

Archaeological sites

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Cayo District contains several pre-Columbian mayan ruins and sites, among these areCaracol,Xunantunich,Cahal Pech,[5]Baking Pot,Lower DoverandEl Pilar.

Demographics

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Religion in Cayo (2010 census)[1]
Roman Catholicism 24,229 34.9%
No religion 13,660 19.7%
Pentecostal 10,838 15.6%
Seventh-day Adventist 3,011 4.3%
Mennonite 2,812 4.1%
Nazarene 2,605 3.8%
Baptist 1,843 2.7%
Anglican 1,498 2.2%
Other religion 8,747 12.6%

According to the 2010 Population and Housing Census, Cayo District's total population is of 73,202 residents (compared to the district's 2000 population of 53,715); of whom 36,803 are males and 36,399 are females. The total number of households is 15,497 and the average household size is 4.7.[1]

The southern half of Cayo District is very low densely populated. A large majority of the district's population lives north of the17th parallel.

Rural and urban development

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In 2010, the total population of Cayo's urban areas was of 36,455; 17,939 males and 18,516 females. 7,468 total households and a 4.9 average household size. The total population of Cayo's rural areas was of 36,747; 18,864 males and 17,883 females. 8,029 total households and a 4.6 average household size.[1]

References

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  1. ^
  1. ^abcd"Belize's top Country Markets Analysis | Statistical Institute of Belize"(PDF).statisticsbelize.org.bz.Archived fromthe original(PDF)on August 12, 2011.
  2. ^"Belize: Districts, Towns & Villages - Population Statistics, Maps, Charts, Weather and Web Information".citypopulation.de.Archivedfrom the original on 2017-12-18.Retrieved2017-10-08.
  3. ^"District Administration (Alteration of Boundaries) Proclamation, 1960".British Honduras: Government Printer.Archivedfrom the original on 23 May 2024.Retrieved23 May2024.
  4. ^"Inferior Courts Act, Chapter 94"(PDF).Government of Belize. 2020.Archived(PDF)from the original on 23 May 2024.Retrieved23 May2024.
  5. ^"Distribution of Early Middle Formative Period Sites".Archived fromthe originalon 2003-02-20.Retrieved2008-03-13.
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16°50′N88°55′W/ 16.833°N 88.917°W/16.833; -88.917