Nanay River Explained

Nanay River
Map Size:300
Pushpin Map:Peru
Pushpin Map Size:300
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of mouth
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Peru
Subdivision Type3:Region
Subdivision Name3:Loreto Region
Length:315km (196miles)
Discharge1 Location:Iquitos (near mouth)
Discharge1 Avg:930m3/s1072.655m3/s[1] 1284m3/s[2]
Mouth:Amazon River
Mouth Coordinates:-3.7°N -88°W
Basin Size:16673.4km219413km2[3]

The Nanay River is a river in northern Peru. It is a tributary of the Amazon River, merging into this river at the city of Iquitos. The lower part of the Nanay flows to the north and west of the city, while the Itaya River flows to the south and east. Other nearby settlements on the Nanay River include the villages of Santo Tomás, Padre Cocha, and Santa Clara. During periods when the river is low, the many beaches along the Nanay are popular destinations. The Nanay belongs entirely to the lowlands, and is very crooked, has a slow current and divides into many canos and strings of lagoons which flood the flat, low areas of country on either side. It is simply the drainage ditch of districts which are extensively overflowed in the rainy season. Captain Archibald Butt USN, ascended it 195miles, to near its source. A part of the Nanay River flows through the Allpahuayo-Mishana National Reserve.

The Nanay is a blackwater river and it has a high fish species richness, including several that are well known from the aquarium industry. Some of these, notably green discus, are the result of accidental introductions that happened in the 1970s.[4] [5]

The river is the location of hundreds of illegal artisanal mines digging for gold.[6]

The 2012 floods of the Amazon, Itaya, and Nanay rivers, amid the heaviest rains the region had faced in 40 years, left approximately 80,000 people homeless.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rivers Network. 2020.
  2. Web site: Oficina Nacional de Evaluación de Recursos Naturales (ONERN). 1980.
  3. Web site: Oficina Nacional de Evaluación de Recursos Naturales (ONERN). 1980.
  4. Ricketts, M.; and Schlese, D: The Peruvian Altum... it's NOT an Altum, it's Scalare. Retrieved 1 June 2014.
  5. Aquatechnics: Rio Nanay. Retrieved 1 June 2014.
  6. News: Gabay . Aimee . 22 December 2023 . ‘This river is doomed’: Peru’s gold rush threatens waterways and the people who depend on them . The Guardian . 25 December 2023.
  7. Web site: 7 April 2012 . Inundaciones afectan a unos 80 mil pobladores . Flooding affects some 80,000 poor . https://web.archive.org/web/20140731223149/http://peru21.pe/2012/04/07/impresa/inundaciones-afectan-80-mil-pobladores-2019067 . 2014-07-31 . 2016-06-27 . . Spanish.