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Yguazú
- from the Tupi Guarani language family
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THE
IGUAÇÚ FALLS
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Cataratas
do Iguaçú - Brasilian name |
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Cataratas
del Iguazú - Argentinian name
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Iguassú
- older Portugueseame |
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....
With an average height of 72m / 236 feet across a river's edge 2.7
km / 1.6 miles wide and with at least three names they are greater
than Niagara. In some dry seasons there are as many as three hundred
separate falls and in flood times there are as few as three. They
lie within two national parks in subtropical forest filled with countless
birds and butterflies. Many mammals including jaguars, giant otters,
coatis and bush dogs live in places off the beaten track. The falls
are a UNESCO World Heritage Site and and one of South America's greatest
natural spectacles. |
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Photos and text by Tony and Marion Morrison
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These
remarkable falls on the border of Brasil and Argentina approximately
550 km / 340 miles inland from the Atlantic ocean and are named
after the river they dominate. The name varies according to the
various local languages though the same suffix or ending açu,
assú or azú is used. It is derived from
Tupi Guarani the original language family of the area and means
'big'. The falls comprise roughly 300 falls. Below the falls the
river races through a narrow gorge before entering the River Parana
the major tributary of the River Plate. The falls were were discovered
early in 1542 by a Spanish commander Álvar Núñez
Cabeza de Vaca and were declared a World Heritage Site in 1984 and1986
The falls lie within the boundaries of two National Parks - one
Argentinian and the other Brasilian.
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| SLIDESHOW
FOR WINDOWS MEDIA |
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| SLIDESHOW
FOR REAL PLAYER |
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A LAND OF MIGHTY RIVERS |

Roads
and airports connect the towns with many places in South America
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The
river Parana running north to south is one of the world's
greatest rivers. It rises in Brasil and with a major tributary
the Paranaiba has a length of about 3998 kms / 2484 miles.
This makes it South America' s second longest river after
the Amazon.The Parana carries a a huge volume of water and
in this region is crossed by a bridge between two cities in
the top left. Ciudad del Este in Paraguay and Foz de Iguaçú
in Brasil, literally meaning ' mouth of the Iguaçú
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The
huge Itaipú dam straddles the Parana river between
Paraguay and Brasil just outside the top right of the map.
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river coming in from the east in the top right is the Iguaçú
or Iguazú as it is known in Argentina. It rises close
to the Brasilian city of Curitiba within approximately 50kms
/ 31 miles of the Atlantic ocean and has a total length of approximately
1198kms / 745 miles most of which is in Brasil. The falls are
in the green shaded and forested area on the right where the
river narrows upriver from the meeting with the Parana. A bridge
crosses the Iguazú at the Argentinian town of Puerto
Iguazú close to the confluence. |
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| The
Iguaçú /Iguazú river above the falls from
the Argentinian bank. |
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The
Parana river from the Argentinian bank with the Paraguayan city
of Ciudad del Este beyond. |
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The
Iguaçú / Iguazú river pours over the
edge of an ancient basaltic lava flow dating from Mesozoic
Era of geological time over 135 million years ago
The
gorge of the river begins below the falls which are very slowly
being cut back upstream due to erosion
Photo;
Danny Aeberhard
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The
marker of The Three Frontiers - the meeting point of Brasil,
Argentina and Paraguay at the mouth of the Iguaçú
/ Iguazú river. From the Brasilian side. |
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THE
DISCOVERY By 1542 Spanish and Portuguese explorers were
getting to know their way around South America. Ten years earlier
over on the Pacific coast Francisco Pizarro had found his way in
to the Inca Empire. On the Atlantic coast the mouth of the Amazon
was discovered by a Spaniard in January 1500 and Portuguese traders
soon began small settlements for collecting a richly coloured 'brazil
wood' from the forests. The name is derived from the Latin 'brasile'
meaning red. Meanwhile the River Plate from the Spanish word
'plata' meaning silver attracted explorers trying to
find a way to a land they believed was rich with the precious metal.
One expedition left Seville in Spain in 1535 and headed for the
River Plate. The adventurers set up a base near the site of present
day Buenos Aires and exploratory groups were despatched inland.
One commanded by a Spaniard Juan de Salazar went up the river Parana
and then to the River Paraguay where his men built a stockade they
called Asunción.
Back
at base the leader of the main group fell ill and decided to return
to Spain. He died at sea and when news of his death and the isolated
garrison at Asunción reached Spain a relief expedition was
sent out. The commander Álvar Núñez Cabeza
de Vaca was a travel-hardened Spaniard from the city of Jerez de
la Frontera in southwestern Spain. He had already made his name
by exploring Florida, parts of Texas and some of Mexico beteween
1528 /36. Álvar Núñez eached Santa Catalina
Island [now Santa Catarina] on the coast of Brasil late in 1541
and decided to strike boldly inland at roughly the right latitude
to reach Asunción overland. In late 1541 Álvar Núñez
set out with two hundred and fifty men and twenty six horses from
close to where the city of Florianopolis stands today.
The
expedition headed into an incredible wilderness of low mountains
- the Serra do Mar, dense forests and huge rivers. The Spaniards
had no idea of the kind of reception they would meet from the indigenous,Tupi
Guarini native population.
Reports from friendly people along the way were good and they found
the headwaters of the Yguazú river and followed it westward
downstream. Some of the explorers used canoes and others travelled
by land. In January 1542 the reached the falls.....'
The current of the Yguazú was so that the canoes were carried
furiously down river, for near this spot there is a considerable
fall and the noise made by the water leaping down some high rocks
into a chasm may be heard a great distance off and the spray rises
two spears high and more over the fall....*
They
were the first Europeans to report the falls. The extract is
taken from written accounts and translations 1555
- 1567 - 1891
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| MANY FALLS |
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A
viewing platform on the Brasilian side
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The
entry to the gorge below the falls
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Palms
beside the gorge on the Argentinian side
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The
Devil's Throat / Garganta del Diablo -Photo Danny Aeberhard
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IF
YOU MISSED THE SLIDESHOW FOR WINDOWS MEDIA
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IF
YOU MISSED THE SLIDESHOW FOR REAL PLAYER
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| THE
NATIONAL PARKS - Bem
vindo.... Bienvenido! |
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BRASIL
Parque Nacional do Iguaçú,
- State of Paraná, Brasil
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park was created in 1939 and covers 185,000 hectares / 457,135 acres.
In 1986 it was named by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site . The entrance
is 18 kms / 11 miles by road from Foz do Iguaçu. From a visitor
centre at the entrance to the park luxury omnibuses make the journey
to the forested edge of the falls. An observation tower stands beside
the largest fall and below and at the water's edge walkways extend
over the river to even more views of the falls. |
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| ARGENTINA
Parque Nacional Iguazú - Misiones Province
Argentina |
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park was created in 1934 and covers 55,000 hectares / 135,905 acres
. In 1984 it was named by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site. The park
entrance is 18km / 11 miles by road from Puerto Iguazú. From
the Visitor Centre at the entrance to the park a mini-railway takes
a route into the forest with stops at Cataratas Station for many of
the falls and walks through forest beside the river. The train then
continues to the Devil's Throat station where another walk at a higher
level leads above one of the most spectacular falls |
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| Which
side is best? Both can be visited easily in one day and both are
wonderful. To see much of the wildlife a longer stay is needed with
arrangements to trek deeper into the parks |
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Tiny
fungi grow on fallen branches above the river. This is a
tropical wet forest and the rainfall averages 1600mm per
year. It is a forest of several layers including emergent
canopies. The humid air from rain and spray from the falls
helps the growth of many plants, especially bromeliads,
mosses and ferns
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Richly
coloured lichens on the trunk of a rainforest tree
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On
the left- strangler plants cover the trunk of a tree. Above
a Katydid or bush cricket lays eggs at night. This insect
has long antennae and is naturally camouflaged as a leaf
On
the right a small Mazama or brocket deer in the forest at
dusk Local name is Corzuela roja
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A
giant otter, Pteronura brasiliensis is one of the
rarest animals in the park. large specimens may be as much
as 1.3m . Local name is Lontra gigante or Arirai
Toco
Toucan Ramphastos toco locally known as Tucán
grande or Tucano toco or tucanoaçu
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Tapirs
are the heaviest of all South American land mammals. This
is Tapirus terrestris the species of the lowlands
and known locally as the Anta - a large specimen
may be almost 2m long
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