Salinas River (Guatemala)

history

,| watershed = }} The Salinas is a river in Guatemala. The river is called Chixoy River from its sources (located at ) in the highlands of Huehuetenango and El Quiché until it reaches the Chixoy hydroelectric dam (located at ), where the Río Salama and Rio Carchela converge with the Río Negro. After the Chixoy dam, the river is called Río Chixoy and flows northwards through Alta Verapaz until it reaches the border with Mexico. From there on it continues alon the border for 113 km as the Salinas river until it finally converges with the Río de la Pasión (at ) to form the Usumacinta river which flows into the Gulf of Mexico.

Guatemala's National Institute for Electricity (INDE) is planning the construction of a new hydroelectric dam on the Chixoy river. The proposed location of the Xalalá hydroelectric dam is situated at . in the municipality of Ixcán, El Quiché.

See also

  • RĂ­o Negro Massacre

References

External links

  • Map of Guatemala including the river


home | This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. See full license termsIt uses material from the Wikipedia article "Salinas_River_%28Guatemala%29 ". | compliance | March 20th 2010