Maps in the News: Tracking “El Chapo” in Mexico
Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman,
leader of the Sinaloa drug cartel in Mexico, escaped from the Altiplano Federal
Prison west of Mexico City on Saturday night.
Guzman was arrested in 2014 after escaping from another high-security
prison in 2001. Guzman escaped via a
nearly mile long tunnel leading from his cell to a half-built house south of
the prison (Google Map above, click to enlarge).
The Wall Street Journal previously created an interactive map depicting
the various significant sites of El Chapo’s life, including his birth in 1954
in La Tuna and his latest capture in 2014 in the resort city of Mazatlan.
The Sinaloa drug cartel is
responsible for the majority of heroin and methamphetamine shipments into the
United States. BBC News created a map
(above) showing the domains of the various drug cartels in Mexico in 2013.
The Ball State University
Libraries’ GIS Research and Map Collection (GRMC) has a huge collection of maps
and atlases of Mexico, including historic and modern city maps and bird’s-eye
views. The collection includes tourist
maps and cruise guides, complete geological sets, topographic maps at various
scales, and maps depicting the pre-Columbian history of Mexico.
Maps from the GRMC are
available for circulation for two weeks or longer and can be used for classroom
exhibits. For more information, please
contact the GRMC at 765-285-1097.
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