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The Laguna del Cisne is a subtropical body of water located near Salinas, in the department of Canelones, in Uruguay. The surface area is 1,8 km², the watershed feeding the lake includes about 50 km². The laguna feeds the Tropa Vieja River, which in turn feeds the Arroyo Pando, which terminates in the Río de la Plata. [1]
Swan Song (Spanish: El canto del cisne) is a 1945 Argentine romantic melodrama film of the classical era of Argentine cinema, directed by Carlos Hugo Christensen and starring Mecha Ortiz, Roberto Escalada and Miguel Gómez Bao. The film portrays the ultimately tragic relationship between a young composer and a more mature woman.
Peinado presumably developed on Miocene volcanic rocks and eruption products of the Laguna Amarga caldera. [11] A major strike-slip fault zone, the Peinado fault, runs from the western side of Salar de Antofalla south along Laguna Peinado to Peinado volcano. [5] Farther south, it may connect to the San Francisco lineament. [11]
Fiesta Noche del Rio is a seasonal outdoor performance in San Antonio, Texas which features the songs and dances of Mexico, Spain, Argentina, and the U.S. states of California and Texas. The performance venue is the Arneson River Theater in the San Antonio River Walk .
The Swan Islands (Spanish: Islas Santanilla or Islas del Cisne, named Islas de las Pozas by Christopher Columbus in 1502) is a chain of three islands located in the northwestern Caribbean Sea, approximately 153 km (95 mi) northeast of the eastern coast of Honduras, [1] with a combined land area of 3.1 km 2 (1.2 sq mi).
The Pan de Azucar River discharges into the southwest of the lagoon, while the streams Arroyo del Sauce and Arroyo Mallorquina discharge in its north and northwest. A stream called Arroyo Potrero at the south end of the lagoon empties the water into the Río de la Plata at the beach of Chihuahua. The total input into the lake per year is ...
Natural pools filled with fresh sea water on the rocky beach View of the changing rooms. The pools were projected in 1960 and their construction came to an end in 1973. The final design excluded a restaurant in the north area of the pool, which had been included in a plan from 1961.
It is the larger of the two swimming pools built by the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in El Yunque, being three times larger than the nearby Baño de Oro pool. [2] Baño Grande is 18 feet (5.5 meters) deep, and it is reinforced by a stone and masonry dam of an unnamed creek belonging to the La Mina River watershed.