Pongo (geography)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A pongo (corruption of the Kichwa punku and the Aymara punku, meaning a door[1]) is a type of canyon or narrow gorge along rivers in Peru, especially on the Marañón River (Upper Amazon) and its affluents, in the Amazonas Region.
See:
- Pongos in Amazonas, the big pongos of Marañón River
- The Amazonas Region, home to pongos
- The Pongo de Manseriche, gorge in northwest Peru where the Marañón River runs
- The Pongo de Mainique, most dangerous whitewater pass on the Urubamba River
- The Olmos-Marañon Route, transcontinental road, includes the "route of pongos"
- The Marañón River, has 35 miles of pongos before the Amazon River
- The Huallaga River, crossing the Andes forming the Pongo de Aguirre
References
- Sources consulted
Britannica, Encyclopædia, Eleventh Edition, Volume 1 (1911). "Amazon River". Project Gutenberg Encyclopedia.
- Endnotes
- ↑ Britannica 1911, op. cit., "Amazon River", page 786, note 2
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.