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Tuira River

Coordinates: 8°19′10″N 78°18′31″W / 8.3194°N 78.3086°W / 8.3194; -78.3086
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tuira River
Tuira River is located in Panama
Tuira River
Location of mouth
Native nameRio Tuira (Spanish)
Location
CountryPanama
ProvinceDarién Province
Physical characteristics
Mouth 
 • coordinates
8°19′10″N 78°18′31″W / 8.3194°N 78.3086°W / 8.3194; -78.3086
 • elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Length230 km (140 mi)
Basin size10,664.42 km2 (4,117.56 sq mi)
Discharge 
 • average363.8 m3/s
Map of Tuira river area
U.S. Defense Mapping Agency maps excerpt showing course of Tuira river

The Tuira River is located in the Darién Province of eastern Panama. It flows into the Bay of San Miguel at the province capital of La Palma.[1][2]

It is the largest river in Panama, and one of its tributaries, the Chucunaque River, is the longest river in Panama.

The river starts in highlands of Darien, and runs south/southeast, and then north and west. It runs past villages as it flows downstream including Matuganti, Sobiaquirú, El Balsal, Boca de Cupe, Capetí, Yape, Aruza, Unión Chocó, Vista Alegre, and Pinogana.[3] It meets the Chucunaque River at El Real de Santa María and then flows northwest towards La Palma.[4] Via the Chucunaque, one can reach Yaviza, which is the terminus of the northern end of the Pan-American Highway.

The Paya River joins the river downstream of Sobiaquirú, via which the village of Paya can be reached. The Púcuro River joins downstream of the Paya, via which the village of Púcuro can be reached.[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Estategia de desarrollo sostenible de Darién" (PDF) (in Spanish). Ministerio de Presidencia-CONADES. 2009. pp. 52–53.
  2. ^ "Rio Tuira". GeoNames. National Geospatial Intelligence Agency. Retrieved July 28, 2021.
  3. ^ (30 April 2008). Panama: Weary repatriation, Relief Web
  4. ^ Tuira River, Britannica.com, Retrieved 30 November 2022
  5. ^ The Geology of the Darien, Panama, and the late Miocene-Pliocene collision of the Panama arc with northwestern South America, GSA Bulletin (2004) 116 (11-12): 1327–1344