- Cancún
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/kan koohn"/; Sp. /kahng koohn"/, n.an island off NE Quintana Roo territory, on the Yucatán Peninsula, in SE Mexico: beach resort.
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City (pop., 2000: 397,191) and island resort, southeastern Mexico.The city, on the northeastern coast of the Yucatán Peninsula, is a service town for the resort on Cancún Island (13 mi [21 km] long), which is connected by a causeway to the city. Originally settled by Maya Indians, the area was first described by John Lloyd Stephens in his Incidents of Travel in Yucatán (1843). Cancún remained a fishing village until 1970, when the area was selected as a suitable site for a resort. The plan proved hugely successful; today Cancún is Mexico's busiest resort.* * *
▪ Mexicocity and adjacent island resort area, Quintana Roo estado (state), southeastern Mexico. Ciudad Cancún (Cancún city) is located on the northeastern coast of the Yucatán Peninsula, facing the Caribbean Sea. It is essentially a service town for the L-shaped resort area of Isla Cancún (Cancún Island), which is 13 miles (21 km) long by 0.25 mile (400 m) wide. The Cancún Island resort area (also called the Zona Hotelera [“Hotel Zone”]) is linked by a causeway to Cancún city. The island, with its skyscraper hotels and sprawling resorts, and the coastal area occupied by Cancún city have abundant white sand beaches, palm groves, and coral reefs. The warm, tropical climate has a short rainy season.Originally settled by Maya Indians, the area was recorded as Cancúne (Mayan: “Vessel at the End of the Rainbow”) in 1843 by the American explorer John Lloyd Stephens and the British explorer Frederick Catherwood in their classic work, Incidents of Travel in Yucatan (1843). Cancún remained a small fishing-and-gathering settlement of about 100 Maya until 1970, when, after a three-year study of conditions by the Mexican government in association with private interests, the area was selected as a suitable site for an international holiday centre. A building boom in the 1980s transformed Cancún Island into a major resort for tourists from the United States, Europe, and elsewhere.Mexican tourism officials view Cancún as a successful model for planned economic and urban development, but critics question its location on an unstable barrier island in Mexico's hurricane zone and note that severe housing problems persist in the adjacent service town, where many tourist-industry workers still live in substandard conditions. Cancún is linked by highway to Puerto Juarez to the north (with ferry service to the tourist destination of Isla Mujeres), to Puerto Morelos to the south (with ferry service to the tourist destination of Cozumel Island (Cozumel)), and to various Mayan sites, including Tulum to the south and Chichén Iztá (Chichén Itzá) 87 miles (140 km) to the west. An international airport is located 12 miles (19 km) south of the city on the mainland. Pop. (2005) urban agglom., 586,288.* * *
Universalium. 2010.