Rio Grande (Paraná River)
Rio Grande | |
River | |
The Rio Grande on the São Paulo/Minas Gerais border in Brazil. Photo taken at the bridge at the end of the Anhanguera Highway. | |
Country | Brazil |
---|---|
States | Minas Gerais, São Paulo |
Source | Mantiqueira Mountains |
- location | Minas Gerais, Brazil |
Mouth | Paraná River |
- location | confluence with Paranaíba River, Brazil |
- coordinates | 20°4′41″S 50°59′41″W / 20.07806°S 50.99472°WCoordinates: 20°4′41″S 50°59′41″W / 20.07806°S 50.99472°W [1] |
Length | 1,090 km (677.29 mi) |
Map of the Rio de la Plata Basin, showing the Grande River joining the Paranaíba River to form the Paraná River. |
Rio Grande[2] (Portuguese for "great river") is a river in south-central Brazil. It rises in the Mantiqueira Mountains in the state of Minas Gerais and descends inland, west-northwestward. Its lower course marks a portion of the Minas Gerais-São Paulo border. At the Mato Grosso do Sul state border, after a course of 1,090 km (677 mi),[3] it joins the Paranaíba River to form the Upper Paraná River.
Major tributaries of the Rio Grande are:
- Rio Aiuruoca, whose source is in Itamonte;
- Rio das Mortes, whose source lies between Barbacena and Nossa Senhora dos Remédios, Piauí;
- Rio Jacaré, whose source is in the Serra do Galba;
- Rio Sapucaí, whose source is in the Mantiqueira Mountains in São Paulo;
- Rio Pardo, whose source is in Ipuiúna.
The basin of the Rio Grande belongs to the Paraná River basin. It has a total area of 143,000 km2 (55,213 sq mi), of which 86,500 km2 (33,398 sq mi) are located within Minas Gerais, which is equivalent to 17.8% of the state territory. The basin of the Rio Grande is responsible for about 67% of all energy generated in the state.
The Grande is interrupted by several dams and reservoirs; in the upper Grande the river forms Furnas Dam, then Peixotos Dam, and downstream, Luiz Barreto Dam, Jaguara Dam, Volta Grande Dam, Marimbondo Dam and Água Vermelha Dam.
The river plays a major role in production of electricity and, due to rapids and waterfalls, and absence of locks, is only navigable by small craft in limited stretches. However the Estrada de Ferro Oeste de Minas (a narrow gauge railway) operated a passenger and freight steam navigation service between 1889 and 1963. The EFOM met the Rio Grande at Ribeirão Vermelho, from where the service ran down the river for 208 km (129 mi), as far as Capetina. There were six stations on the river between Ribeirão Vermelho and Capetinga, and the railway operated a fleet of 6 stern-wheel paddle steamers, together with barges and launches. The service was halted by the completion of the Furnas Dam.
See also
References
- ↑ Rio Grande at GEOnet Names Server Coordinates adjusted using Google Maps and GeoLocator
- ↑ Rio Grande at GEOnet Names Server
- ↑ "Río de la Plata". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 11 August 2010.
External links
- Rio Grande at Wikimapia, Google terrain view, centered on the site of the photo above