Merume River Explained

Merume River
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Guyana
Mouth:Kamarang River
Pushpin Map:Guyana

The Merume River is a river of Guyana, a tributary of the Kamarang River.

Merume is also the name of a nearby mountain,[1] which is 30 miles east of Mount Roraima.[2] Director Creek is a tributary of Merume River. First Falls is a feature of the river which also limits travel by boat.[3]

Merumite was discovered in 1937 appearing as black grains among diamonds and gold in the river gravel. In 1958, merumite was determined to be a complex aggregate of eskolaite and chromium, X-ray diffraction data showed it contained eskolaite, guyanaite, bracewellite, grimaldiite, and mcconnellite.[4]

Kamakusa was a settlement along the river, and formerly a government center.

See also

References

  1. Whitely. Henry. 1884. Explorations in the Neighbourhood of Mounts Roraima and Kukenam, in British Guiana. Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society and Monthly Record of Geography. 6. 8. 452. 10.2307/1800725. 0266-626X.
  2. Tate. G. H. H.. 1930. Notes on the Mount Roraima Region. Geographical Review. 20. 1. 61. 10.2307/209126. 0016-7428.
  3. Milton. Charles. Narain. Sat. 1969-12-01. Merumite occurrence in Guyana. Economic Geology. 64. 8. 910–914. 10.2113/gsecongeo.64.8.910. 1554-0774.
  4. Shpachenko. A. K.. Sorokhtina. N. V.. Chukanov. N. V.. Gorshkov. A. N.. Sivtsov. A. V.. 2006-07-01. Genesis and compositional characteristics of natural γ-CrOOH. Geochemistry International. en. 44. 7. 681–689. 10.1134/S0016702906070056. 1556-1968.

Bibliography