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  1. The falls ceased to exist in 1982 when they were inundated by the impoundment of the Itaipu Dam reservoir. While published figures vary, ranging from 13,000 m 3 (470,000 cu ft) per second [1] to 50,000 m 3 (1,750,000 cu ft) per second, [2] Guaíra's flow rate was among the greatest of any then-existing falls on Earth.

  2. Dec 30, 2021 · Published Dec 30, 2021. Once one of the largest and undeniably the most beautiful falls in the world, Saltos del Guairá was destroyed at the hands of 'progress.'. Waterfalls are some of the most sought after tourist destinations, and it’s easy to understand why: there’s something about the beauty of being surrounded by the power of a ...

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  4. Jan 18, 2016 · Guair Falls, pictured here in December 1978, was submerged after the construction of Itaipu Dam. Mario Cesar Mendona Gomes/Flickr. Some pretty good things happened in the '80s. Michael Jackson's "Thriller" became an anthem, "Back to the Future" hit the big screen and every kid toted a Trapper Keeper to the first day of school.. A circa-1871 map of Guair Falls, taken from the book "A New ...

    • When did Guaira Falls submerge?1
    • When did Guaira Falls submerge?2
    • When did Guaira Falls submerge?3
    • When did Guaira Falls submerge?4
  5. the former Guaíra Falls on the Upper Paraná River. Guaíra Falls, former waterfalls on the Upper Paraná River at the Brazil-Paraguay border, just west of Guaíra, Brazil. Visited by Jesuit missionaries in the 16th century, the falls were supposedly named for a Guaraní Indian chief. The Portuguese name refers only to the seven ( sete ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. The Guairá Falls were, until 1982, the largest waterfalls in the world by water volume. With 49 million liters per second, the 18 falls that formed them doubled the volume of the Niagara Falls and surpassed in 12 times that of the Victoria Falls. They were located on the Paraná River, along the border between Brazil and Paraguay.

  7. Abstract Los Saltos del Guairá, known in English as the Guayra Falls, and in Portuguese as Sete Quedas (Seven Falls), were once the most powerful waterfalls on earth, regarded by those who saw them as “worthy of description by Homer and Virgil.” Located on the Paraná on the Brazil-Paraguay border and endowed over time with near-legendary status, the spectacular falls vanished in October ...

  8. Oct 9, 2014 · By October 27, 1982, the reservoir was fully formed and the falls had vanished. The Brazilian government later dynamited the submerged rock face of the falls, to promote safer navigation on the river. The director of the company that built the dam, later issued a statement saying, "We're not destroying Seven Falls.

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