Geography 2 - Region II Cagayan Valley
Geography 2 - Region II Cagayan Valley
Geography 2 - Region II Cagayan Valley
Geography
Of
The
Cagayan Valley
(Region II)
Agpalo, Adrian Benedict
Aguirre, Lara Marie
Balane, John Mark
Area
2
28,228.83 km (10,899.21 sq mi)
Most of the region lies in a large valley,
between the Cordilleras and the Sierra
Madre mountain ranges. The
eponymous Cagayan River, the country's
largest, runs through its center and flows
south to north from the Caraballo
Mountains to the Luzon Strait, in the town
of Aparri, Cagayan. The official region
includes the outlying Babuyan
Islands and Batanes Islands to the north.
Cagayan Valley is a land of beauty,
plentiful of natural resources and
conveys different development
potentials such as fertile
farmlands, forests and grasslands,
and marine resources.
History
• The earliest inhabitants are the Agta, or Atta,
food- gatherers who roam the forests without
fixed abodes.
• In the nineteenth century the prosperity found in
tobacco cultivation caused many Ilokano to settle
here.
• The most important event in the history of
Cagayan Valley took place in 1572 when Spanish
Conquistador Don Juan de Salcedo traced the
northern coast and landed at the mouth of the
Pamplona River.
It is composed of
five Philippine
provinces: Batanes,
Cagayan, Isabela, Nueva
Vizcaya, and Quirino.
Ilocano-The majority of
people living in Cagayan,
mostly from migrants
coming from the Ilocos
Region.
Highest elevation
(Dos Cuernos)
1,785 m (5,856 ft)
Climate
●Agriculture
-Rice
-Large Corn crop
-Wood industry
Fun Fact!
Reina Mercedes,
Isabela,
Philippines is the
most regal address
in the Philippines,
because it
represents the
three Spanish
Royal figures:
Queen Mercedes
de Orleans, Queen
Isabel II, and King
Felipe II.
Nueva Vizcaya
A province of the Philippines located in
the region of Cagayan Valley in Luzon. Its
capital is Bayombong
Rice, Fisheries,
Fruits, Vegetables,
Loggings and wood
industry
Fun Fact