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Uruguay River

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Sunset in the Uruguay River
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Sunset in the Uruguay River

The Uruguay River (in Spanish, Río Uruguay, pronounced [uɾuˈɣwaj]) is a river in South America. It flows from north to south and makes boundary with Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay (separating some of the Argentine provinces of the Mesopotamia from the other two countries).

Map of the Uruguay River
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Map of the Uruguay River

The river measures about 1,500 km in length and starts in the Serra do Mar (Brazil), at [28°09′S 40°0′W], where the Canoas River and the Pelotas River are joined, at about 2,050 m above mean sea level. In this stage the river goes through uneven, broken terrain, forming rapids and falls. Its course through Rio Grande do Sul is not navigable.

Together with the Paraná River, the Uruguay forms the Río de la Plata estuary. It is navigable from around Salto Chico. Its main tributary is the Río Negro, which is born in Uruguay and goes 500 km until its confluence with the Uruguay, which is located 100 km north from the Uruguay's confluence with the Río de la Plata, in Punta Gorda (Colonia Department, Uruguay).

The river is crossed by three international bridges between Argentina and Uruguay. From north to south, these are: the Salto Grande Bridge, the General Artigas Bridge and the Libertador General San Martín Bridge.

The basin of the Uruguay River has an area of 370,000 km². Its main economic use is the generation of hydroelectricity (see Salto Grande Dam).

Origin of the name

The name of the river comes from the Spanish settlers' interpretation of the word the locals used to designate it. The original name, Urugua'ý, in Guaraní, means "river of the painted birds".

The cellulose plant conflict

Uruguay River from the Argentine side
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Uruguay River from the Argentine side

Since April 2005, Argentina and Uruguay are experiencing a conflict over the Uruguay River. Two foreign companies are building cellulose processing plants at Fray Bentos, Uruguay, opposite Gualeguaychú, Argentina, and residents of the latter as well as many others have protested, claiming that the plants will pollute the river shared by the two countries. At the turn of the year the conflict escalated into a diplomatic crisis. Since December 2005 the international bridges linking the Argentine province of Entre Ríos with Uruguay have been intermitently blockaded by Argentine protestors, causing major disruptions in commercial traffic and tourism.

See also

References

 


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