It depends on your definition of "dangerous". You mean to the health of those who extract it? To those who handle it during transformation into finished products? To the environment?
Some of the most dangerous in all three terms include gold and silver, which are extracted using cyanide, a very toxic poison. Other resources which are dangerous on their own right include asbestos, uranium and cobalt. Oil and natural gas are also dangerous, as both are highly flammable and spills are expensive to cleanup while being pretty harmful to the environment.
It can be argued that the most dangerous natural resource in Latin America is illegal drugs, such as cocaine, due to the violence, corruption, and social instability they generate through drug trafficking activities in the region.
There are several of them. Between Latin America and the United States, the Rio Grande qualifies as such. Other rivers that act as natural borders between countries of the same region include the Parana, Orinoco and Usumacinta.
Some of the poorest countries in Latin America include Haiti, Nicaragua, and Honduras. These countries face challenges such as political instability, natural disasters, and high levels of poverty and inequality.
The leading producer of oil and natural gas in Latin America is Brazil. It has significant reserves and production capacity, particularly in offshore fields such as the pre-salt reserves.
Brazil is considered to have the most natural resources in Latin America due to its vast reserves of agricultural land, minerals, and water resources. The country is known for its abundance of resources such as iron ore, coffee, sugarcane, and soybeans.
Oil is the most abundant resource in Latin America north of the equator. Mexico and Venezuela have the largest reserves of oil in that region.
Honduras has the largest rate of murders in all Latin America. The most dangerous city in all Latin America is Juarez, in northern Mexico.
One-resource economies are dependent on the income of usually one export commodity such as tropical fruit, oil or some other natural resource. In Latin America, such countries include Venezuela (oil), Suriname (aluminum), Dominica (bananas), French Guiana (seafood) and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (bananas).
Latin America.
Oil and farming
The anwser is Central America.
Imperialistic and resource-driven.
Every country in Latin America has its own natural resources.
one example is that if you have a single crop you dont have the money you need to develop all of your resources
the equator...... i think
In Mexico, Brazil and Venezuela.
There are several of them. Between Latin America and the United States, the Rio Grande qualifies as such. Other rivers that act as natural borders between countries of the same region include the Parana, Orinoco and Usumacinta.
The Rio Grande River.