Parana pine - meaning and definition. What is Parana pine
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What (who) is Parana pine - definition

RIVER DELTA IN ARGENTINA
Parana River Delta; Parana Delta; Paraná Pavón; Paraná Ibicuy; Paraná de las Palmas; Paraná Guazú; Paraná Miní; Paraná Bravo; Islas de Paraná; Islas del Paraná; Delta del Paraná
  • Ceibo]] blossoms
  • Boat dock-shed and typical house on stilts in [[Tigre, Buenos Aires]] (Lower Delta)
  • The Paraná Delta area, from south of Santa Fe, through Buenos Aires and beyond.

Brazilian destroyer Paraná (1910)         
  • Line drawing of the ''Pará'' class
BRAZILIAN DESTROYER
Brazilian destroyer Parana (1910)
Paraná was a destroyer of the Brazilian Navy, serving from 1910 to 1933."Paraná III," Serviço de Documentação da Marinha — Histórico de Navios.
Taça FPF         
Copa Parana; Copa Paraná
The Taça FPF is a Brazilian football tournament played in the second half of the year. A spot in the Copa do Brasil and in the Campeonato Brasileiro Série D is granted for the winner of the competition.
Flag of Paraná (state)         
  • 23px
  • 23px
BRAZILIAN STATE FLAG
Flag of Parana (state); 🏴󠁢󠁲󠁰󠁲󠁿
The flag of Paraná, Brazil, was adopted on 9 January 1892. It went through changes in March 1947, and again in September, 1990.

Wikipedia

Paraná Delta

The Paraná Delta (Spanish: Delta del Paraná) is the delta of the Paraná River in Argentina and it consists of several islands known as the Islas del Paraná. The Paraná flows north–south and becomes an alluvial basin (a flood plain) between the Argentine provinces of Entre Ríos, Santa Fe and Buenos Aires then emptying into the Río de la Plata.

It covers about 14,000 square kilometres (5,400 sq mi) and starts to form between the cities of Santa Fe and Rosario, where the river splits into several arms, creating a network of islands and wetlands. Most of it is in the jurisdiction of Entre Ríos Province, and parts in the north of Buenos Aires Province.

The Paraná Delta is conventionally divided into three parts:

  • the Upper Delta, from the Diamante – Puerto Gaboto line to Villa Constitución;
  • the Middle Delta, from Villa Constitución to the Ibicuy Islands;
  • the Lower Delta, from the Ibicuy Islands to the mouth of the river.

The total length of the delta is about 320 kilometres (200 mi), and its width varies between 18 and 60 kilometres (11 and 37 mi). It carries 160 million tonnes of suspended sediment (about half of it coming from the Bermejo River through the Paraguay River) and advances from 50 to 90 metres (160 to 300 ft) (depending on the source) per year over the Río de la Plata. It is the world's only river delta that is in contact not with the sea but with another river.

The Lower Delta was the site of the first modern settlements in the Paraná-Plata basin and is today densely populated, being the agricultural and industrial core of Argentina and host to several major ports. The main course of the Paraná lies on the west of the delta, and is navigable downstream from Puerto General San Martín by ships up to Panamax kind.