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unas y otras provincias''[[note]] ''The evil that bothers Argentina is the extention:\\

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unas y otras provincias''[[note]] ''The evil that bothers Argentina is the extention:\\extension:\\
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After the epic fail of the first foundation, that according to the landsknecht Ulric Schmidl ended [[ImAHumanitarian with unusual gastronomy]] and the foundation of Asunción del Paraguay, the city of Buenos Aires was founded again, and the region slowly gained population. Also, the first colonizers freed many horses and cows in the region, that begin to reproduce insanely fast thanks to the lack of natural predators and the abundance of food (grass); and also, the settlers planted many trees near the population centers, hoping to create visible landmarks in an otherwise unremarkable region.

to:

After the epic fail of the first foundation, that according to the landsknecht Ulric Schmidl ended [[ImAHumanitarian with unusual gastronomy]] and the foundation of Asunción del Paraguay, the city of Buenos Aires was founded again, and the region slowly gained population. Also, the first colonizers freed many horses and cows in the region, that begin to reproduce reproduced insanely fast thanks to the lack of natural predators and the abundance of food (grass); and also, the settlers also, planted many trees near the population centers, hoping to create visible landmarks in an otherwise unremarkable region.



In fiction, the pampas are a wild and lawless territory, populated by brave {{Gaucho}}s, skillfull and honourable riders and cattle-herders; or fearsome {{bandito}}s, malevos (depending on the author) and [[TheSavageIndian murderous Indians]]. This perhaps was partly TruthInTelevision in the past, but today the pampas are mostly vast farmlands owned by the argentine [[CattleBaron oligarchy]], highly man-modified, and interrupted by huge cities like Buenos Aires and Rosario, and medium towns like Paraná and La Plata in Argentina. Uruguay, on the other hand, is entirelly part of this region, with many characteristics (geographical and cultural, economical and historical) shared with Argentina.

to:

In fiction, the pampas are a wild and lawless territory, populated by brave {{Gaucho}}s, skillfull and honourable riders and cattle-herders; or fearsome {{bandito}}s, malevos (depending on the author) and [[TheSavageIndian murderous Indians]]. This perhaps was partly TruthInTelevision in the past, but today the pampas are mostly vast farmlands owned by the argentine [[CattleBaron oligarchy]], highly man-modified, and interrupted by huge cities like Buenos Aires and Rosario, and medium towns like Paraná and La Plata in Argentina. Uruguay, on the other hand, is entirelly entirely part of this region, with many characteristics (geographical and cultural, economical and historical) shared with Argentina.

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