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The Río de la Plata was first explored by Europeans in 1516, when an expedition led by Juan Díaz de Solís, chief navigator of Spain, traversed the estuary as part of its effort to find a route to the Pacific; the estuary was temporarily named in memory of Díaz de Solís after his death on its shores at the hands of ...
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It empties into the Atlantic Ocean and forms a funnel-shaped indentation on the southeastern coastline of South America. Depending on the geographer, the Río de ...
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.
Río de la Plata Basin ... It includes areas of southeastern Bolivia, southern and central Brazil, the entire country of Paraguay, most of Uruguay, and northern ...
The first European colony was the city of Buenos Aires, founded by Pedro de Mendoza on February 2, 1536, abandoned, and re-established by Juan de Garay on June ...
Apr 14, 2014 · History. The Río de la Plata was first explored by the Portuguese in 1513. The Spanish first explored it in 1516, when the Spanish navigator ...
1. Historical Background. The area around the Río de la Plata (the estuary formed by the convergence of the Paraná and Uruguay rivers) is now one of the ...
In 1658 he traveled overland across the Argentine pampas to the silver mines of Potosí, located in present-day Bolivia. In 1672, Acarete published an account of ...
The social history of the La Plata River Basin has been intrinsically tied to its landscapes and their transformation. This article divides the history of ...
A little history ... The large estuary formed by the confluence of the Rivers Paraná and Uruguay was named Río de la Plata (Silver River) due to the belief that ...