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The Paraná River (Portuguese: Rio Paraná [ˈʁi.u paɾaˈna] ⓘ; Spanish: Río Paraná [ˈri.o paɾaˈna] ⓘ; Guarani: Ysyry Parana) is a river in south-central South America, running through Brazil, Paraguay, and Argentina for some 4,880 kilometres (3,030 mi). [3] Among South American rivers, it is second in length only to the Amazon River.
The Isla Botija Nature Reserve was one of the first protected area (1958) created in the low delta of Parana river [4] [circular reference] [5] The Predelta National Park, created in 1992, protects a sample of the Upper Delta. It is in the southwest of Entre Ríos, 6 kilometres (4 mi) south of Diamante, and has an area of 24.58 square ...
A map of Argentina's river drainage basins. This list is arranged by drainage basin , with respective tributaries indented under each larger stream's name. Rivers in the table above are in bold.
Rossello, Eduardo A.; Veroslavsky, Gerardo; de Santa Ana, Héctor; Fúlfaro, Vicente J.; Fernández Garrasino, César A. (2006), "La dorsal Asunción - Río Grande: Un altofondo regional entre las cuencas Paraná (Brasil, Paraguay y Uruguay) y Chacoparanense (Argentina)", Revista Brasileira de Geociências (in Spanish), 36 (3): 181– 196, doi ...
View of the saladillo River. The Saladillo Stream (Spanish, Arroyo Saladillo or Río Saladillo [1]) is a small tributary of the Paraná River, that discharges into it between the cities of Rosario and Villa Gobernador Gálvez, in the province of Santa Fe, Argentina.
The Parana River, which carries almost 80% of Argentina's grains and oilseeds for export, is at the second lowest level for this time of year since 1970, behind only a major decline in 2021, data ...
The Parana River once lapped the banks near his wooden stilt home that he could reach by boat. The Parana, South America's second-largest river behind only the Amazon, has retreated this year to ...
The Paraná flooded savanna ecoregion has an area of 3,885,000 hectares (9,600,000 acres). It extends along the Paraná River valley from Resistencia, Chaco, south to Buenos Aires. [1] It includes the middle and lower Paraná floodplains, and those of the Paraguay River, a major tributary of the Paraná.