geo.wikisort.org - RiverThe Pomeroon River (also Río Pomerón[1][2] or Pomaron[3]) is located in Guyana, South America, situated between the Orinoco and the Essequibo rivers. The area has long been inhabited by Lokono people. The Pomeroon River is also one of the deepest rivers in Guyana.
Pomeroon River |
---|
 |
 Old Map of Pomeroon River (1688) |
|
|
Country | Guyana |
---|
|
Mouth | Atlantic Ocean |
---|
• coordinates | 7°37′N 58°45′W |
---|
• elevation | Sea level |
---|
Pomeroon is within the Guyana coastal plain and the area is populated with mangrove swamp vegetation. Siriki Creek is an estuary of the Pomeroon River.[4] The mouth of the river has been deflected from pouring straight into the Atlantic ocean by a sandy spit that redirects the river to the northwest via the Cozier Canal.[5]
History
According to the London Encyclopaedia of 1829,[3] this river was the western boundary between the Demerara and Essequibo Colony[3] and Spanish Guiana.[3]
Use
Coconuts are a major agricultural product in the Pomeroon area, grown for their water and copra.[6]
Tapakuma is a tributary of the Pomeroon River that was developed into a water conservancy which greatly improved cultivation of rice.[7]
Settlement
Shell mounds associated with early human burials dated to the pre-ceramic Alaka phase have been unearthed in the area.[4]
In 1581, the Dutch founded a colony on the banks of the river. The settlement was destroyed by Arawak People in alliance with Spaniards in 1596. In 1658, lured by the Dutch advertisement to colonize the Essequibo, a Jewish colony settled within the Dutch lands on the Pomeroon. Their plantations were destroyed when the British of Barbados invaded in 1665 and most moved on to Suriname.[8]
An Anglican mission was established in 1840 by W. H. Brett.[9] In Brett's travelogue, the eastern bank of the mouth of the Pomeroon was called Cape Nassau, and the river's source was in the Imataka Mountains. The largest tributary was the Arapaiaco River, located 43 miles from the sea. Bouruma was another name for the river. He observed various Amerindian tribes settled along the river, including Warao and Arawak, as well as former plantation slaves.[10]
Settlements on the Pomeroon include the town of Charity, and Kabakaburi (an Amerindian mission settlement founded by Brett, located 16 miles up from Charity[11]).
See also
- List of rivers of Guyana
- List of rivers of the Americas by coastline
- Agriculture in Guyana
- History of the Jews in Guyana
References
- Solana, Ana Crespo (2006). América desde otra frontera: la Guayana holandesa (Surinam) : 1680-1795 (in Spanish). Editorial CSIC - CSIC Press. ISBN 9788400084486.
- Ríos, Manuel Alberto Donis (1987). Evolución histórica de la cartografía en Guayana y su significación en los derechos venezolanos sobre el Esequibo (in Spanish). Academia Nacional de la Historia. ISBN 9789802221097.
- The London Encyclopaedia: Or Universal Dictionary of Science, Art, Literature, and Practical Mechanics, Comprising a Popular View of the Present State of Knowledge. Thomas Tegg. 1829.
- Plew, Mark G.; Daggers, Louisa B. "Recent excavations at the Siriki shell mound, north-western Guyana". Retrieved 2021-01-21.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - Bird, Eric (2010-02-25). Encyclopedia of the World's Coastal Landforms. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 245–246. ISBN 978-1-4020-8638-0.
- Coconut genetic resources. Rao, V. Ramanatha., Oliver, Jeffrey., Batugal, Pons. Serdang, Malaysia: International Plant Genetic Resources Institute. 2005. ISBN 92-9043-629-8. OCLC 225109689.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - Strachan, A. J. (1980). "Water Control in Guyana". Geography. 65 (4): 301. ISSN 0016-7487. JSTOR 40570303.
- Oppenheim, Samuel (1907). "An Early Jewish Colony Western Guiana, 1658-1666 : And ITS Relation to the Jews in Surinam, Cayenne and Tobago". Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society (16): 95–186. ISSN 0146-5511. JSTOR 43059606.
- Whitehead, Neil L.; Alem‡n, Stephanie W. (2009). Anthropologies of Guayana: Cultural Spaces in Northeastern Amazonia. University of Arizona Press. p. 127. ISBN 978-0-8165-2607-9.
- BRETT, REV W. H. (1868). THE INDIAN TRIBES OF GUIANA. pp. 70–71, 79.
- McDougall, Russell; Davidson, Iain (2016-06-03). The Roth Family, Anthropology, and Colonial Administration. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-315-41728-8.
Dutch Empire |
---|
Colonies and trading posts of the Dutch East India Company (1602–1798) |
---|
Governorate General | |
---|
Governorates |
- Ambon
- Banda Islands
- Cape Colony
- Celebes
- Ceylon
- Coromandel
- Formosa
- Malacca
- Moluccas
- Northeast coast of Java
|
---|
Directorates | |
---|
Commandments |
- Bantam
- Malabar
- West coast of Sumatra
|
---|
Residencies |
- Bantam
- Banjarmasin
- Batavia
- Cheribon
- Malang
- Palembang
- Preanger
- Pontianak
|
---|
Opperhoofd settlements |
- Myanmar
- Canton
- Dejima
- Mauritius
- Siam
- Timor
- Tonkin
- Vietnam (1637–43)
|
---|
|
|
Colonies and trading posts of the Dutch West India Company (1621–1792) |
---|
Colonies in the Americas |
- Berbice 1
- Brazil
- Cayenne
- Curaçao and Dependencies
- Demerara
- Essequibo
- New Netherland
- Pomeroon
- Sint Eustatius and Dependencies
- Surinam 2
- Tobago
- Virgin Islands
|
---|
Trading posts in Africa |
- Arguin
- Gold Coast
- Loango-Angola
- Senegambia
- Slave Coast
|
---|
- 1 Governed by the Society of Berbice
- 2 Governed by the Society of Suriname
|
|
|
Settlements of the Noordsche Compagnie (1614–1642) |
---|
|
|
Colonies of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (1815–1962) |
---|
Until 1825 |
- Bengal
- Coromandel
- Malacca
- Suratte
|
---|
Until 1853 | |
---|
Until 1872 | |
---|
Until 1945 | |
---|
Until 1954 |
- Curaçao and Dependencies 3
- Surinam 3
|
---|
Until 1962 | |
---|
- 3 Became constituent countries of the Kingdom of the Netherlands; Suriname gained full independence in 1975, Curaçao and Dependencies was renamed to the Netherlands Antilles, which was eventually dissolved in 2010.
|
|
|
Kingdom of the Netherlands (1954–present) |
---|
|
|
Authority control  | |
---|
На других языках
[de] Pomeroon (Fluss)
Der Pomeroon ist ein Fluss in Guyana. Er liegt zwischen dem Orinoco und dem
Essequibo und war gleichzeitig im 17. Jahrhundert eine niederländische Kolonie.
- [en] Pomeroon River
[es] Río Pomeroon
El Pomeroon (también conocido en español como Pomaron[1] o Pomerón)[2][3] es un río que está situado en la parte occidental de Guyana, en la séptima región Pomeroon-Supenaam.
Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии