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The image displays two pages from what appears to be an encyclopedia or dictionary, featuring text and two illustrations. The left page contains dense text in Spanish, discussing historical events, geographical locations, and botanical terms. It mentions locations such as "Guanixio," "Chichimecas," "Narváez," "Cortés," "Moctezuma," "Alvarado," "Puebla," "Temixtlán," and "Tacarigua." The right page continues with Spanish text, focusing on botanical definitions, and includes two illustrations. One illustration, at the bottom right, shows a cross-section of a tree trunk with a detailed view of its rings and cellular structure, labeled "corteza de Cinnamomum camphora y de Ulmus." Above this is a photograph of a pine tree's cross-section, showing its intricate grain and cellular arrangement, identified as "tronco de pino." The text on the right page discusses terms like "Cortisol," "Cortisona," "Corto," "Cortocircuito," "Cortometraje," "Cortot," "Cortija," "Cortijero," "Cortina," "Coruña," and "Cortina d'Ampezzo."

Regarding the city of Tacarigua, Venezuela: The text mentions "Tacarigua" in the context of a place where conquistadors established an administration. It is noted that these territories were constituted as the "Nueva España" and that Hernán Cortés ordered the conquest of Mexico and its dependent territories, including lands conquered by Narváez and Velázquez. The text further elaborates on the indigenous populations and the establishment of colonial rule. However, the image does not provide any visual depiction or further contextual details specifically about the city of Tacarigua itself. The description is purely based on the written content.
Katy

Jun 25, 2026, 5:06 PM

Tacarigua, Venezuela

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The image displays two pages from what appears to be an encyclopedia or dictionary, featuring text and two illustrations. The left page contains dense text in Spanish, discussing historical events, geographical locations, and botanical terms. It mentions locations such as "Guanixio," "Chichimecas," "Narváez," "Cortés," "Moctezuma," "Alvarado," "Puebla," "Temixtlán," and "Tacarigua." The right page continues with Spanish text, focusing on botanical definitions, and includes two illustrations. One illustration, at the bottom right, shows a cross-section of a tree trunk with a detailed view of its rings and cellular structure, labeled "corteza de Cinnamomum camphora y de Ulmus." Above this is a photograph of a pine tree's cross-section, showing its intricate grain and cellular arrangement, identified as "tronco de pino." The text on the right page discusses terms like "Cortisol," "Cortisona," "Corto," "Cortocircuito," "Cortometraje," "Cortot," "Cortija," "Cortijero," "Cortina," "Coruña," and "Cortina d'Ampezzo." Regarding the city of Tacarigua, Venezuela: The text mentions "Tacarigua" in the context of a place where conquistadors established an administration. It is noted that these territories were constituted as the "Nueva España" and that Hernán Cortés ordered the conquest of Mexico and its dependent territories, including lands conquered by Narváez and Velázquez. The text further elaborates on the indigenous populations and the establishment of colonial rule. However, the image does not provide any visual depiction or further contextual details specifically about the city of Tacarigua itself. The description is purely based on the written content.

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Katy

Jun 25, 2026, 5:06 PM

Tacarigua, Venezuela

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