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Guiana Highlands

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Guiana Highlands

 

a plateau in northeastern South America, surrounded by the Orinoco and Amazon lowlands on the north and south and by the Andes and the Atlantic Ocean on the west and east. The Guiana Highlands is part of the territories of Colombia, Venezuela, Brazil, Guyana, Surinam, and French Guiana. The highest elevation is Mount Neblina (3,014 m). The plateau is the projection of the ancient foundation of the South American platform.

The Guiana Highlands are composed primarily of Archeozoic metamorphic rocks, covered in places by Proterozoic quartzite sands and conglomerates of sedimentary mantle-rock. The Upper Archeozoic rocks contain major deposits of iron ore (primarily in the north) as well as gold and diamonds, while the thick weathered crust contains bauxite and manganese ores (primarily in the east). The relief is dominated by denuded socle plains (elevation, 150-400 m), with separate insular heights that become lower toward the periphery and in the upper reaches of the Orinoco-Rio Negro basin. The most mountainous relief is in the central region along the border between Brazil and Venezuela, and north of it there are sandstone table plateaus with steep slopes (the Serra-Imery, Sierra Parima, Pakaraima, and the Auyán-Tepuí and La-Gran-Sabana massifs). Sandstone mantles are also found in the western areas of the highlands (maximum elevation, 910 m). Crystalline block massifs and ridges are typical in the west central area (maximum elevation, 2,400 m), along the border of Guiana and Brazil (maximum elevation, 1,000 m), and in central Surinam (maximum elevation, 1,280 m). Along the shores of the Atlantic Ocean, the Guiana Highlands are bordered by the Guiana Lowlands. A hot subequatorial climate prevails, with average monthly temperatures ranging from 22° to 28° C. In the east there is a short dry season in the autumn, where precipitation is up to 3,500 mm annually. In the central regions there is a longer winter dry season, with 1,200-1,700 mm of precipitation per year. Western areas of the Guiana Highlands have a constant wet equatorial climate. The extremely dense network of rivers includes the Orinoco basin (including the Inirida, Ven-tuari, Caura, and Caroni rivers), the Amazon Basin with its sources and tributaries (the Rio Negro, Trombetas, and Paru rivers), and rivers flowing directly into the Atlantic Ocean, such as the Essequibo, Courantyne, Maroni and Oyapock. All these rivers have many rapids and an abundance of waterfalls, including the highest one on earth—Angel Fall in the Caroni basin, which is 1,054 m high. Enormous hydroelectric resources are available. The water flow in winter decreases two to five times, primarily in the rivers of the central region.

The western and eastern regions of the Guiana Highlands are covered by humid evergreen forests (with valuable types of timber) on reddish yellow lateritic soils. The central regions contain mainly deciduous and evergreen forests on red soils. Windward regions (relative to the northeast trade winds) have areas of savannas. The animal world belongs to the Brazilian subregion of the Neotropical region. There are platyrhine monkeys, sloths, anteaters, armadillos, tapirs, peccaries, opossums, and jaguars, as well as many types of birds, reptiles, fish, and insects. The sparse Indian population engages in hunting, fishing, and primitive agriculture. In the northern and eastern regions mining is carried on, and some lumbering is done, primarily in the eastern areas of the highlands.

REFERENCE

Lukashova, E. N. Iuzhnaia Amerika. Moscow, 1958.

E. N. LUKASHOVA

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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