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Basilicata

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Basilicata

a region of S Italy, between the Tyrrhenian Sea and the Gulf of Taranto. Capital: Potenza. Pop.: 596 821 (2003 est.). Area: 9985 sq. km (3855 sq. miles)
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Basilicata

 

(Lucania), a region of Italy in the southern part of the Apennine Peninsula. The territory of Basilicata is divided between the provinces of Matera and Potenza. Area, 9,990 sq km; population, 633,400 (1968). The main cities are Matera and Potenza. Basilicata is bounded on the southeast by the Gulf of Taranto in the Ionian Sea and on the southwest by the Gulf of Policastro- in the Tyrrhenian Sea. The western, southern, and northern parts are occupied by the Lucanian Apennines (maximum elevation, 2,007 m); the east, by the periphery of the Le Murge plateau; and the southeast, by a coastal depression. The climate is a dry Mediterranean one. There are sparse xerophyte forests and shrubs.

Economically, Basilicata is one of the most backward areas of the country. Its economy is based on agriculture, which employed 56.5 percent of the economically active population in 1961. Land resources are divided as follows: arable land, 46.7 percent; meadows and pastures, 27.7 percent; orchards, vineyards, and olive groves, 5 percent; and forests, 17 percent (1966). The basic agricultural crops are wheat and oats. Leguminous crops, cabbage, peppers, and early vegetables are also grown. There is livestock raising on mountain pastures (548,000 sheep and 130,000 goats in 1968).

Industry, which employs 26 percent of the economically active population, is represented chiefly by small-scale food-processing, woodworking, and garment-enterprises and by handicraft workshops. Lignite used for thermal electric power plants is mined in Mercura. Electricity (210 gigawatt-hours in 1967) is generated mainly by hydroelectric power stations. A petrochemical industry has grown up in the cities of Bari, Monopoli, and Ferrandina on the basis of the natural gas deposits in the Pisticci-Ferrandina region (discovered in 1959), from which the gas is brought by pipelines. There is a rolling mill in Potenza, a transport-machinery enterprise in Matera, and a paper mill in Venosa.

T. A. GALKINA

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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In fact, ENI's film narratives in Southern Italy do not aim at revealing the truth, particularly in Sicily and Lucania, as much as they demonstrate the occurrence of a radical change vis-a-vis the past and the present reality.
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The level of activity of the males has been shown to be the only predictor of spawning success in Lucania goodei (McGhee et al., 2007), suggesting that the activity of the males and male-male competition are important components of sexual selection in these types of breeding systems.
The book gives a finely etched portrait of Lucania in Southern Italy.
The haul included a Roman Republic Apulia Luceria bronze 'quincunx', which realised PS340, a group of Roman Imperial bronze coins, which went for PS380, and a pre-Roman 450 to 350 BC Lucania silver starter, which sold for PS360.
(34) It has been proved that by the end of the fifth century BC plays and vases were exported from Athens to southern Italy, particularly to Lucania and Apulia.
The girl's two attackers were young thugs named Salvatore Lucania and Benjamin Siegel - later known as "Lucky" Luciano and "Bugsy" Siegel.
The number of bicycles is not listed, but the cycling craze of the era is represented by a number of advertisements, including that for the Lucania cycle, whose component parts were all made in John O'Neill's Dublin factory.
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