Neuquén River

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The valley of the Neuquén River and the Pellegrini Lake, at about 39° S 68° W, photographed from the ISS.
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The valley of the Neuquén River and the Pellegrini Lake, at about 39° S 68° W, photographed from the ISS.

The Neuquén River is the second most important river of the province of Neuquén in the Argentine Patagonia, after the Limay River.

The river is born at the northwest of the province at an altitude of 2,300 metres, to be feed by a number of streams through valleys of the lower Andes while advancing diagonally in southeast direction. Among these streams, some of them from draining of small lakes, are the Trocomán, Reñi Leuvü, Agrio and Nahueve. Further down, its main tributaries are the rivers Varvarco, and Agrio, who provides almost a third of the Neuquén flow. Along its way the river receives some sediments from volcanoes Copahue and Domuyo that might sometimes affect the clarity of the otherwise clean waters.

After meeting the Agrio, the Neuquén river has not natural lakes that could regulate its flow, what results in sharp raises of level during thawing and rainy periods. A derivative channel towards the Pellegrini Lake in Río Negro Province has been built to compensate for abrupt changes in the flow, as well as the Cerros Colorados Complex, also used to generate hydroelectricity.

The average flow of the river is of 308 /s (measured at Paso de Indios), and its surface is around 50,774 km². At its end, the Neuquén meets the Limay River near the city of Neuquén, to form the Río Negro, who continues its way east towards the Atlantic Ocean.

Although not as famous as other fishing rivers in Patagonia, the river is also visited by fly fishing and spinning enthusiasts, as well as the two artificial lakes named Los Barreales and Mari Menuco, located by the river near the border with Río Negro Province. The main catch are trouts and Patagonian pejerrey.

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