Cariaco Basin

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Gulf of Cariaco, Venezuela
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Gulf of Cariaco, Venezuela

The Cariaco Basin lies off the north central coast of Venezuela and forms the Gulf of Cariaco. It is bounded on the east by Margarita Island, Cubagua Island, and the Araya Peninsula; on the north by Tortuga and the Tortuga Banks; on the west by Cape Codera and the rocks known as Farallón Centinela; and on the south by the coast of Venezuela.

It is a naturally occurring anoxic basin where the sediments are deposited without oxygen, thus preserving organic matter which would otherwise be converted by bacteria. The Cariaco Basin is a natural sediment trap, and the varves record how much organic matter is produced in the overlying waters year by year. Because it is one of the largest anoxic basins in the world, it is the subject of much paleoclimatological, chemical oceanographic, and biological research.

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