Araguaia River
{{Infobox river
| name = Araguaia River
| native_name ={{native name|pt|Rio Araguaia}}
| name_other = ♂ Berohokỹ [beɾohoˈkə̃],
♀ Bèrakuhukỹ [bɛɾakuhuˈkə̃] (Karajá)
| name_etymology =
| image = Rio araguaia.jpg
| image_size = 250
| image_caption = A tree in the Araguaia National Park in flood season
| map = Tocantins_watershed.png
| map_size = 300
| map_caption = Map of the Araguaia/Tocantins Watershed
| pushpin_map =
| pushpin_map_size = 300
| pushpin_map_caption=
| subdivision_type1 = Country
| subdivision_name1 = Brazil
| subdivision_type2 = State
| subdivision_name2 = Goiás, Mato Grosso, Tocantins, Pará
| subdivision_type3 =
| subdivision_name3 =
| subdivision_type4 =
| subdivision_name4 =
| subdivision_type5 = Cities
| subdivision_name5 = Aragarças, Barra do Garças
| length = {{convert|2,627|km|mi|abbr=on}}
| width_min =
| width_avg =
| width_max =
| depth_min =
| depth_avg =
| depth_max =
| discharge1_location= Conceição do Araguaia, Brazil (Basin size: {{convert|358,125|km2|abbr=on}})
| discharge1_min =
| discharge1_avg = {{convert|6,172|m3/s|cuft/s|abbr=on}}
{{convert|6,216|m3/s|cuft/s|abbr=on}}
| discharge1_max =
| source1 = Araguaia River
| source1_location = Mineiros, Goiás
| source1_coordinates= {{Coord|-18.034|-53.063|format=dms|display=i}}
| source1_elevation = {{Convert|858|m|abbr=on}}
| mouth = Tocantins River
| mouth_location = São João do Araguaia, Pará
| mouth_coordinates = {{coord|5|22|34|S|48|43|08|W|display=inline,title}}
| mouth_elevation = {{Convert|90|m|abbr=on}}
| progression =
| river_system = Tocantins basin
| basin_size = {{convert|377,000|km2|mi2|abbr=on}}{{cite journal |last1=Aquino |first1=Samia |last2=Latrubesse |first2=Edgardo |last3=Bayer |first3=Maximiliano |title=Assessment of wash load transport in the Araguaia River (Aruanã Gauge Station), central Brazil |journal=Latin American Journal of Sedimentology and Basin Analysis |date=2009 |volume=16 |issue=2 |pages=119–128 |url=https://www.lajsba.sedimentologia.org.ar/index.php/lajsba/article/view/111 }}
{{convert|358,125|km2|mi2|abbr=on}}
| tributaries_left =
| tributaries_right =
| custom_label =
| custom_data =
| extra =
|discharge2_location=Confluence of Tocantins|discharge2_avg={{convert|6,420|m3/s|cuft/s|abbr=on}}
{{convert|6,500|m3/s|cuft/s|abbr=on}}}}
The Araguaia River ({{langx|pt|Rio Araguaia}} {{IPA|pt|ˈʁi.u aɾaˈɡwajjɐ|}}, Karajá: ♂ Berohokỹ [beɾohoˈkə̃], ♀ Bèrakuhukỹ [bɛɾakuhuˈkə̃]){{cite book |last1=Lima |first1=Nei Clara de |last2=Leitão |first2=Rosani Moreira |date=2019 |title=Iny tkylysinamy rybèna. Arte Iny Karajá: patrimônio cultural do Brasil |url=http://portal.iphan.gov.br/uploads/publicacao/livro_arte_iny_karaja_patrimonio_cultural_do_brasil.pdf |location=Goiânia |publisher=IPHAN-GO |isbn=978-85-7334-343-4}} is one of the major rivers of Brazil, and a tributary of the Tocantins River.
Geography
The Araguaia River comes from Goiás-Mato Grosso south borders. From there it flows northeast to a junction with the Tocantins near the town of São João.
Along its course, the river forms the border between the states of Goiás, Mato Grosso, Tocantins and Pará. Roughly in the middle of its course the Araguaia splits into a fork (with the western stream retaining the name Araguaia and the eastern one being called the Javaés River). These later reunite, forming the Ilha do Bananal, the world's largest river island. The vein of the Javaés forms a broad inland where it pours back into the main Araguaia, a 100,000 hectare expanse of igapós or flooded forest, blackwater river channels, and oxbow lakes called Cantão, protected by the Cantão State Park. It is one of the biologically richest areas of the eastern Amazon, with over 700 species of birds, nearly 300 species of fish, large populations of species such as the giant otter, the black caiman, the pirarucú, one of the world's largest freshwater fish, and the Araguaian river dolphin (or Araguaian boto), all occurring within a large area.
A large portion of the Araguaia's course is navigable all year, but the river below the Cantão wetlands is interrupted by rapids.
The middle and lower basin of the river is in the Xingu–Tocantins–Araguaia moist forests ecoregion.{{citation |title=Eastern Amazonian - Brazil (NT0180)|publisher=WWF: World Wildlife Fund
|last=Sears |first=Robin |url=http://www.worldwildlife.org/ecoregions/nt0180|access-date=2017-03-22}}
The combined watershed of Araguaia and Tocantins rivers (named the Araguaia Tocantins Basin) covers approximately 9.5% of Brazil's national territory. This area is an integral part of the Amazon biome; however, the Araguaia River is not a tributary of the Amazon.
"Araguaia" means "River of the macaws" in the native Tupi language.
=Tributaries=
Its principal tributary is the Rio das Mortes, which rises in the Serra de São Jerônimo, near Cuiabá, Mato Grosso, and is navigable to Pará.
Other important tributaries include the Bonito, Garcas, Tapirape and the Formoso or Cristalino on the west, and the Pitombas, Claro, Vermelho, Tucupa and Chavante on the east.{{EB1911|inline=y|wstitle=Araguaya|volume=2|page=315}}
History
{{expand section|date=November 2011}}
It was explored in part by Henri Coudreau in 1897.Coudreau's Voyage au Tocantins-Araguaya (Paris, 1897) From 1972 to 1974 this region was the scene of a conflict between left-wing guerrilla movements and forces supporting the then military dictatorship.
Towns
Among the most important settlements on the banks of the Araguaia River are (in a downstream order):
Tourism
{{expand section|date=November 2011}}
Several parts of the river's course are protected by national parks and other reserves like the Emas National Park and the Araguaia National Park. The Araguaia has "beaches" - bright sandy banks that seam the stream from May to October.
Deforestation and Impacts on the Araguaia
Deforestation and expansion of cattle ranching and agriculture in the Araguaia basin has been extreme during the last four decades.{{cite journal | last1=Ferreira | first1=Manuel E. | last2=Ferreira | first2=Laerte G. | last3=Latrubesse | first3=Edgardo M. | last4=Miziara | first4=Fausto | title=Considerations about the land use and conversion trends in the savanna environments of Central Brazil under a geomorphological perspective | journal=Journal of Land Use Science | publisher=Informa UK Limited | volume=11 | issue=1 | date=2013-10-10 | issn=1747-423X | doi=10.1080/1747423x.2013.845613 | pages=33–47| s2cid=128533975 | doi-access=free }}{{Primary source inline|date=July 2020}} As a consequence, strong linear erosion has produced thousand of gullies just in the upper Araguaia basin, and the river mainstem suffered strong sedimentation and fluvial metamorphism (changes in its channel pattern).{{cite journal |last1=Latrubesse |first1=Edgardo |title=The Geomorphologic response of a large pristine alluvial river to tremendous deforestation in the South American Tropics: The case of the Araguaia River |journal=Geomorphology |volume=113 |issue=3–4 |pages=239–252 |doi=10.1016/j.geomorph.2009.03.014 |bibcode=2009Geomo.113..239L |year=2009 |hdl=11336/102246 |hdl-access=free }}{{Primary source inline|date=July 2020}}
See also
References
External links
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20050406104413/http://www.rioaraguaia.com.br/ Rio Araguaia (information for tourists in Portuguese, Spanish and English)]
- [http://www.pousadapescador.com.br/ Hotel, turismo, pescaria, passeios ecológicos Araguaia,Luiz Alves, Bananal, Cristalino]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20051115071547/http://www.transportes.gov.br/bit/hidro/detrioaraguaia.htm hydrographic information (in Portuguese)]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20060519081942/http://www.transportes.gov.br/bit/mapas/mapclick/hidro/bctoca.htm Basin map (in Portuguese)]
- [http://www.v-brazil.com/graphics/tocantins.gif Tocantins state, with Rivers] v-Brazil.com
- [http://www.v-brazil.com/graphics/para.gif Pará state, with Rivers] v-Brazil.com
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20131113082130/http://www.araguaia.org/cantao/Introduction.html Instituto Araguaia]
- [https://www.gifex.com/imapa/americas/md_Goias_brazil.pdf Brazilian Ministry of Transport]
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Category:Rivers of Mato Grosso