Cuyuní River


The Cuyuní River is a South American river and a tributary of the Essequibo River.
The Cuyuní River marks a border in the Guyana–Venezuela territorial dispute for approximately.
Makarapan Mountain is a sandstone range by the Cuyuní.

History

On January 2, 1895, the "incident of the Cuyuní River", so named by the general, was an armed confrontation between Venezuelans and British in the region of the river over the territorial dispute between Venezuela and British Guyana, which under Sifontes the Venezuelans left winners.
At dawn, British policemen led by an Inspector Barnes of England took an unoccupied military station of Venezuelan nationality, located on the left bank of the river. Barnes' men hoisted the British flag during the day.
Captain Andrés Avelino Domínguez, second in command of Sifontes, was sent to recover the settlement. The result was the withdrawal of the British and the capture of Barnes and his men, who were taken to the General Police Station, which increased tensions between the two countries amid an internal crisis in Venezuela.

Settlement

The river is a source of alluvial gold and attracts mining in the form of dredging. Illegal mining also occurs on the river banks, and mining also has exacerbated the border issue between Guyana and Venezuela.
Large-scale mining operation Aurora gold mine is on the Cuyuní River.
Development of a hydroelectric power site is under consideration at Kamaria on the Cuyuní River.

Venezuela

is a Venezuelan settlement on the Cuyuní River.

Guyana

Some of the Kali'na people live in the Cuyuní River valley, part of which is in Guyana.
Eteringbang is a border settlement with an airstrip. Saint Martin and Ankoko Island have been the subject of further disputes between Venezuela and Guyana. In 2015, GDF forces continued observation from Eteringbang and Kaikan and other points along the river.
The town of Bartica is close to the mouth of the Cuyuní, where it meets with the confluence of Essequibo and Mazaruni rivers.