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St. Thomas
The most built-up of the three U.S. Virgin Islands, St. Thomas used to be known mainly for its nonstop shopping in Charlotte Amalie, where thousands of cruise ship passengers descend daily.
Mexico
The different landscapes that steal your breath away are the first thing we’ll show you of Mexico, but everything else—its historical legacies, tomorrow-ready indulgences and the warmest of people—we’ll leave for you to discover.
Facts-Mexico
Facts
Central America
About four million years ago, give or take a millennium, a fortunate collision of underwater continental places heaved up a great mass of stone, creating a steep and narrow isthmus separating the Pacific Ocean from the Caribbean Sea, linking the then-existing continents of North and South America.
Belize City
There are good reasons for the saying: “It’s better in Belize.”
Liberia, Costa Rica
With Liberia as second air service gateway from the U.S., it is much easier to tap into the Pacific pleasures of Guanacaste and its neighboring provinces, a corner that captures the majority of the beach-loving, surfing, and deep-sea fishing crowd.
San Salvador
The smallest country in Central America, El Salvador, is filled with important Mayan ruins, fine craft traditions alive and well in country villages, jungle peaks that brush the sky, lines of volcanic cones rising over lakes and valleys, and a Pacific shoreline where surfers push off from white and black beaches to meet world-class waves.
Guatemala City
Not only is it the transportation gateway to the rest of the country, but Guatemala City is also a cosmopolitan capital that offers a compelling mix of new shopping centers and traditional markets, fine hotels, very good restaurants, a lively nightlife and excellent museums.
Roatan, Honduras
Moored 30 miles off mainland Honduras, the Bay Islands make up a pristine archipelago that covers about 92 sq. miles along the world’s second largest coral reef.
Managua
Nicaragua is gaining a reputation as Central America’s most intriguing new travel destination.
Panama City
The New York Times, in placing Panama in its No. 1 slot of 45 places to go in 2012, suggested: “Go for the canal. Stay for everything else.”
South America
Where are travelers going to be going in 2013? Delta is betting that North Americans are going to continue their pursuit of discovery vacations in South America.
Buenos Aires
Big, brash and beautiful Buenos Aires is one of the world’s hottest destinations, in 2012 voted top South American city by Conde Nast Traveler readers.
Brasilia, Brazil
Brazil’s inland futuristic capital Brasilia was carved out of nowhere in the 1950s, a stark, modernist and purpose-built city, and the only one in the world built in the 20th century that achieved UNESCO World Heritage status.
Rio de Janerio, Brazil
After winning bids to host both the 2014 World Cup soccer and the 2016 Summer Olympic Games, Rio de Janeiro—already a prized destination for American travelers—is solidly in the spotlight.
Santiago
Centerpiece of the Central Valley, Santiago is home to a third of Chilean people.
Bogota
There are many good reasons for travelers to spend some quality time in Bogota, one of the oldest cities in the Western Hemisphere and nowadays one of its liveliest and most interesting capitals.
Quito
Ecuador made its way onto Lonely Planet’s “Top 10 Countries” picks for 2013, pointing to the great expectations for the new railway network that opens this year.
Georgetown
Guyana is an Indian word meaning “land of many waters,” and these many waters are the major thoroughfares along which people and produce move about the country.
Lima
Peru is the cradle of South America’s ancient civilizations, today promoted by PromPeru as “Peru: Empire of Hidden Treasures.”
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