Samalá River

Not to be cofused with the Salamá River in Guatemala, a tributary of the Chixoy River.
Samalá River

The Samalá River at Zunil
Basin
Main source Sierra Madre
15°02′05″N 91°34′22″W / 15.034759°N 91.572847°W / 15.034759; -91.572847 (Source of the Samalá River)
Source elevation 3,200 m (10,500 ft)
River mouth Pacific Ocean
14°11′31″N 91°47′08″W / 14.191934°N 91.785450°W / 14.191934; -91.785450 (Mouth of the Samalá River)
Mouth elevation 0 m
Country Guatemala
Physiognomy
Length 145 km (90 mi)
The Samalá River on the outskirts of Quetzaltenango city

The Samalá is a river in southwestern Guatemala. Its sources are in the Sierra Madre range, in the departments of Totonicapán and Quetzaltenango. From there it flows down, past the towns San Cristóbal Totonicapán, Quetzaltenango, El Palmar and Zunil, through the coastal plains of Retalhuleu into the Pacific Ocean.[1]

The Samalá river basin covers a territory of 1,510 square kilometres (580 sq mi) and has a population of around 400,000 people.[2] Its proximity to the active Santa Maria and Santiaguito volcano complex, with its recurring lava and lahars flows, leads to a heightened risk of serious flooding.[3]

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Río Samalá.

References

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