Piracicaba River

The Piracicaba River is a river of São Paulo state in southeastern Brazil. It is a tributary of the Tietê River, which it joins in the reservoir created by Barra Bonita Dam. There is also another Piracicaba river in the state of Minas Gerais, named after the one from São Paulo state, since the early colonizers of Minas Gerais largely came from São Paulo.

Piracicaba River
Piracicaba River crossing the city of Piracicaba
Location
CountryBrazil
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationSão Paulo state
Mouth 
  location
Tietê River
Length115 km (71 mi)
Basin size12,400 km2 (4,800 sq mi)
Discharge 
  average144 m3/s (5,100 cu ft/s)
Footbridge over the Piracicaba River in Piracicaba

Geography

The basin of the Piracicaba River extends over an area of 12,531 km², located in the southeast of the state of São Paulo and extreme south of Minas Gerais.[1]

The Piracicaba river is born from the junction of the Atibaia and Jaguari rivers, in the municipality of Americana. After crossing the city of Piracicaba, it receives the waters of its main tributary, Corumbataí river. The Piracicaba River runs 115 km from its source to its mouth on the Tietê River between the municipalities of Santa Maria da Serra and Barra Bonita.

Piracicaba has several meanders that make the waters of its bed suitable for the navigation of small boats after the city of Piracicaba. Among the versions of the origin of the river name, there is that, due to its meanders, the fish get impounded, meaning in Tupi "place where the fish stops".[2]

The watershed of the Piracicaba River is located in one of the most developed regions of the state of São Paulo, encompassing municipalities such as Bragança Paulista, Campinas, Limeira, Americana, Atibaia, Rio Claro, Santa Bárbara d'Oeste and Piracicaba.

gollark: Synthesizing UDP unicode microchip...
gollark: Linuxing SSL 56k spyware...
gollark: > when you not sleeping and awakeFair.
gollark: Why not listen to osmarks internet radio™?
gollark: Well, what truly *is* "woke" in today's complex societies?

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.