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The Curaray River (also called the Ewenguno River or Rio Curaray) is a river in eastern Ecuador and Peru. It is a tributary of the Napo River, which is a part of the Amazon basin. The land along the river is home to several indigenous people groups including the Kichwa and Huaorani. The river itself is home to caimans, and piranhas.

Curaray River
Location
Countries
  • Ecuador
  • Peru
Physical characteristics
SourceAndes
MouthNapo River
  coordinates
2°21′39″S 74°5′29″W
Length800 km (500 mi)[1]
Basin size26,775 km2 (10,338 sq mi)[2] 26,704.7 km2 (10,310.7 sq mi)[3]
Discharge 
  locationCuraray, Maynas, Loreto Region, Peru (near mouth)
  average2,044.372 m3/s (72,196.3 cu ft/s)[4] 2,155 m3/s (76,100 cu ft/s)[5]

"Palm Beach"


In 1956, on a sandbar on the Curaray, five Christian missionaries were killed by Huaorani tribespeople during Operation Auca, an attempt to evangelize the Huaorani. The missionaries' bodies were then thrown into the river. A rescue team later recovered four of the bodies and buried them in a mass grave on the river bank. The fifth, that of Ed McCully was claimed to have been discovered downstream by a group of natives who produced McCully's wristwatch. However, his body was never located and positively identified.

The missionaries had arrived by airplane and chose the sandbar as a suitable place to land, since it was the only land area nearby clear of trees. They built a camp on the sandbar which they nicknamed "Palm Beach". They also built a treehouse nearby.

After the attack, the Huaorani stripped the plane of its fabric skin. The plane was then abandoned and left to the river. It disappeared, and was not discovered until 1994. Someone was walking along the sandbar and noticed a piece of bare metal sticking out of the sand. It was later discovered to be part of the metal framework of the Piper aircraft flown by Nate Saint. The river had almost completely buried its remains in the sand. The framework of the plane is now displayed in the headquarters of the Mission Aviation Fellowship.

Today, the Huaorani Christian community often use the Curaray River as a site for baptisms. Steve Saint and his children were all baptized there.

The area is posited to be the origin of criollo cacao, the most rare type.[6]


References


  1. Ziesler, R.; Ardizzone, G.D. (1979). "Amazon River System". The Inland waters of Latin America. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. ISBN 92-5-000780-9. Archived from the original on 8 November 2014.
  2. "Oficina Nacional de Evaluación de Recursos Naturales (ONERN)". Autoridad Nacional del Agua. 1980. hdl:20.500.12543/1063.
  3. "Rivers Network". 2020.
  4. "Rivers Network". 2020.
  5. "Oficina Nacional de Evaluación de Recursos Naturales (ONERN)". Autoridad Nacional del Agua. 1980. hdl:20.500.12543/1063.
  6. "Cacao analysis dates the dawn of domesticated chocolate trees to 3,600 years ago".



На других языках


[de] Río Curaray

Der Río Curaray ist ein etwa 1070 km langer rechter Nebenfluss des Río Napo in Ecuador und Peru.
- [en] Curaray River

[es] Río Curaray

El río Curaray es un largo río sudamericano de aguas blancas que discurre por Ecuador, un afluente del río Napo. Tiene una longitud de 800 km,[1] de los que unos 414 km[2] discurren por el territorio amazónico peruano del departamento de Loreto.

[ru] Курарай

Курарай (исп. Río Curaray) — река в Эквадоре и Перу. Правый приток реки Напо (бассейн Амазонки).



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