Orinoco


The Orinoco is one of the longest rivers in South America at. Its drainage basin, sometimes known as the Orinoquia, covers approximately, with 65% of it in Venezuela and 35% in Colombia. It is the fourth largest river in the world by discharge volume of water due to the high precipitation throughout its catchment area. The Orinoco River and its tributaries are the major transportation system for eastern and interior Venezuela and the Llanos of Colombia. The environment and wildlife in the Orinoco's basin are extremely diverse.

Etymology

The river's name is derived from the Warao term for "a place to paddle", derived from the terms güiri and noko i.e. a navigable place.

History

The mouth of the Orinoco River at the Atlantic Ocean was documented by Christopher Columbus on 1 August 1498, during his third voyage. The Orinoco as well as its tributaries in the eastern Llanos, such as the Apure and Meta, were explored in the 16th century by German expeditions under Ambrosius Ehinger and his successors. In 1531, starting at the principal outlet in the delta, the Boca de Navios, Diego de Ordaz sailed up the river to the Meta. Antonio de Berrio sailed down the Casanare to the Meta, and then down the Orinoco and back to Coro. In 1595, after capturing de Berrio to obtain information while conducting an expedition to find the fabled city of El Dorado, the Englishman Sir Walter Raleigh sailed down the river, reaching the savanna country.
From April to May 1800, the Prussian-born Alexander von Humboldt and his companion, Aime Bonpland, explored stretches of the Orinoco, supported by indigenous helpers and guided by his interest to prove that South America's waterways formed an interconnected system from the Andes to the Amazon. He reported on the pink river dolphins and later published extensively on the river's flora and fauna.
The source of the Orinoco River, located at Cerro Delgado–Chalbaud, at above sea level, was discovered in 1951 by a French-Venezuelan expedition that explored the upper Orinoco course to the Sierra Parima near the border with Brazil, headed by Venezuelan army officer Frank Risquez Iribarren.
In 1968, an expedition was set off by The Geographical Journal and Hovercraft from Manaus, Brazil. Aboard a SR.N6 hovercraft, the expedition members followed the Rio Negro upstream to where it is joined by the Casiquiare canal, on the border between Colombia and Venezuela. After following the Casiquiare to the Orinoco River they hovered through perilous rapids of Maipures and Atures. The Orinoco was then traversed down to its mouths in the Gulf of Paria and then to Port of Spain. The primary purpose of the expedition was filming for the BBC series The World About Us episode "The Last Great Journey on Earth from Amazon to Orinoco by Hovercraft", which aired in 1970 and demonstrated the abilities of a hovercraft, thereby promoting sales of this British invention.
The first bridge across the Orinoco River, the Angostura Bridge at Ciudad Bolívar, Venezuela, was completed in 1967. The first powerline crossing of the Orinoco River was completed in 1981 for an 800kVTL single span of using two towers tall. In 1992, an overhead power line crossing for two 400kV-circuits was completed west of Morocure. It had three towers, and the two spans measured and, respectively. In 2006, the Orinoquia Bridge was completed near Ciudad Guayana.

Geography

The course forms a wide ellipsoidal arc, surrounding the Guiana Shield; it is divided in four stretches of unequal length that very roughly correspond to the longitudinal zonation of a typical large river:
  • Upper Orinoco – long, from its headwaters to the Raudales de Guaharibos rapids, flows through mountainous landscape in a northwesterly direction
  • Middle Orinoco – long, divided into two sectors, the first of which ca. long has a general westward direction down to the confluence with the Atabapo and Guaviare rivers at San Fernando de Atabapo; the second flows northward, for about, along the Colombia–Venezuela border, flanked on both sides by the westernmost granitic upwellings of the Guiana Shield which impede the development of a flood plain, to the Atures rapids near the confluence with the Meta River at Puerto Carreño
  • Lower Orinoco – long with a well-developed alluvial plain, flows in a northeast direction, from Atures rapids down to Piacoa at Barrancas
  • Delta Amacuro – long that empties into the Gulf of Paría and the Atlantic Ocean, a very large delta, some and at its widest.
At its mouth, the Orinoco River forms a wide delta that branches off into hundreds of rivers and waterways that flow through of swampy forests. In the rainy season, the Orinoco River can swell to a breadth of and a depth of. The stream gradient of the entire river is 0.05%. Downstream of Raudales de Guaharibos the gradient is 0.01%, which is also the gradient from Ciudad Bolivar to the ocean.
Encompassing the states of Anzoategui-Guarico and Monagas states, the Interior Range forms the northern boundary and the Guayana Shield the southern boundary. Maturin forms the eastern subbasin and Guarico forms the western subbasin. The El Furrial oil field was discovered in 1978, producing from late Oligocene shallow marine sandstones in an overthrusted foreland basin.

Tributaries

Most of the important Venezuelan rivers are tributaries of the Orinoco, the largest being the Caroní, which joins it at Puerto Ordaz, close to the Llovizna Falls. A peculiarity of the river system is the Casiquiare canal, which starts as an arm of the Orinoco, and finds its way to the Rio Negro, a tributary of the Amazon River, thus forming a distributary and 'natural canal' between the Orinoco and the Amazon.

Ciudad Guayana

Month1996199719981943–1998
January17,62724,38610,91916,661
February14,48617,1447,58310,108
March15,33415,7678,9067,702
April12,51412,61512,41110,609
May23,67025,15232,75126,317
June45,78143,14249,06245,179
July61,17755,59763,65958,412
August67,63961,27567,75664,975
September65,93353,82566,41663,244
October57,91238,74254,18953,201
November45,26728,37238,34540,805
December36,09421,11630,13029,229
Mean38,62033,09436,84435,537

Ciudad Bolívar

Ecology

The boto and the giant otter inhabit the river system. The Orinoco crocodile is one of the rarest reptiles in the world; its range in the wild is restricted to the middle and lower Orinoco River basin.
More than 1,000 fish species have been recorded in the river basin, and about 15% are endemic. By far the largest orders are Characiformes and Siluriformes, which together account for more than 80% of the fresh water species. Some of the more famous are the black spot piranha and the cardinal tetra. Because the Casiquiare canal includes both blackwater and clear- to whitewater sections, only relatively adaptable species are able to pass through it between the two river systems, such as the cardinal tetra.

Economic activity

The river is navigable for most of its length, and dredging enables ocean ships to go as far as Ciudad Bolívar, at the confluence of the Caroní River, upstream. River steamers carry cargo as far as Puerto Ayacucho and the Atures Rapids.
In 1926, a Venezuelan mining inspector found one of the richest iron ore deposits near the Orinoco delta, south of the city of San Felix on a mountain named El Florero. Full-scale mining of the ore deposits began after World War II, by a conglomerate of Venezuelan firms and US steel companies. In the early 1950s, about 10,000 tons of ore-bearing soil was mined per day.
The river deposits contain extensive tar sands in the Orinoco oil belt, which may be a source of future oil production.

Recreation and sports

Since 1973, the Civil Association Nuestros Rios son Navegables organize the Internacional Rally Nuestros Rios son Navegables, a motonautical round trip of over 1,200 kilometers through the Orinoco, Meta and Apure Rivers. Starting out from Ciudad Bolívar or San Fernando de Apure, is the longest fluvial rally in the world with the participation of worldwide competitors, more than 30 support boats, logistics teams, thousands of tourists and fans travel. The boats had an average speed of 120 miles per hour.
Since 1988, the local government of Ciudad Guayana has conducted a swim race in the Orinoco and Caroní, with up to 1,000 competitors. Since 1991, the Paso a Nado Internacional de los Rios Orinoco–Caroní has been celebrated every year in April. Worldwide, this swim meet has grown in importance, and it has a large number of competitors.

In culture

The Irish singer and songwriter Enya wrote and sang the song "Orinoco Flow", which she released in 1988.
Jules Verne's novel "Superbe Orénoque" has the river as its central theme.