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  1. The Río de la Plata (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈri.o ðe la ˈplata] ⓘ; lit. ' River of Silver ' ), also called the River Plate or La Plata River in English, is the estuary formed by the confluence of the Uruguay River and the Paraná River at Punta Gorda .

  2. Río de la Plata, a tapering intrusion of the Atlantic Ocean on the east coast of South America between Uruguay to the north and Argentina to the south.

  3. El Río de la Plata [1] está formado por la unión de los ríos Paraná y Uruguay, en el Cono Sur de América y desemboca en el Atlántico sur. Puede ser dividido en dos sectores: el interior, compuesto por los tramos superior y medio, el cual es de poca profundidad y se encuentra desprovisto de intrusión salina, y el exterior, comprendido ...

  4. The Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata (Spanish: Virreinato del Río de la Plata or Spanish: Virreinato de las Provincias del Río de la Plata) meaning "River of the Silver", also called "Viceroyalty of the River Plate" in some scholarly writings, in southern South America, was the last to be organized and also the shortest-lived of the Viceroyalties of the Spanish Empire in the Americas.

  5. The United Provinces of the Río de la Plata (Spanish: Provincias Unidas del Río de la Plata), earlier known as the United Provinces of South America (Spanish: Provincias Unidas de Sudamérica), was a name adopted in 1816 by the Congress of Tucumán for the region of South America that declared independence in 1816, with the Sovereign Congress ...

  6. The Rio de la Plata estuary, between the South American countries of Argentina and Uruguay, houses enormous populations of humans alongside diverse wildlife.

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  8. Remarkable ruins of mission churches in Argentina’s Misiones province and in eastern Paraguay are all that remain of this extraordinary enterprise. Throughout the Spanish colonial era the Río de la Plata remained a backwash of the empire.

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