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San Rafael Falls

Coordinates: 0°06′13″S 77°34′53″W / 0.1037°S 77.5813°W / -0.1037; -77.5813
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San Rafael Falls
Map
LocationSucumbíos and Napo, Ecuador
Coordinates0°06′13″S 77°34′53″W / 0.1037°S 77.5813°W / -0.1037; -77.5813
TypeTiered plunges (until 2020)
Total height131 m (430 ft) (until 2020)[1]
Number of drops2 (until 2020)
Total width30 m (98 ft) (until 2020)[1]
Average width23 m (75 ft) (until 2020)[1]
Run46 m (151 ft) (until 2020)[1]
WatercourseCoca River
Average
flow rate
400 m3/s (14,000 cu ft/s) [1]

The San Rafael Falls (Spanish: La Cascada San Rafael) were, until 2 February 2020, the tallest falls in Ecuador. The 130-metre (430 ft) falls were located on the Coca River in Cayambe Coca Ecological Reserve until a collapse of the river bed upstream of the falls diverted the river underneath the band of hard rock that had originally formed the lip of the waterfall,[2] connecting to a cave below and creating a new natural bridge, possibly surpassing Xianren Bridge as the longest in the world.[3] The falls were a significant tourist attraction with a recorded 30,000 visitors during 2019.[4]

There has been discussion as to whether the riverbed collapse and subsequent disappearance of the falls is connected with the operation of a hydroelectric plant some 20 km upstream. There are concerns too about how the altered hydrology of the river may affect its ecology.[2] Additionally, the river effectively bypassed the resistant rock of the brink of the falls, causing a sudden river rejuvenation, which in turn has resulted in very rapid headward erosion of a steep-sided gorge upstream of the sinkhole, threatening numerous structures upstream, including the dam for the aforementioned hydroelectric plant.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "San Rafael, Cascada de, Ecuador – World Waterfall Database". www.worldwaterfalldatabase.com. Retrieved 2020-04-08.
  2. ^ a b "Why Did Ecuador's Tallest Waterfall Suddenly Disappear?". The Wire. 4 April 2020. Retrieved 6 December 2020.
  3. ^ "Sudden Birth of a Large Natural Bridge in Ecuador — Possibly the Longest in the World!". 10 April 2020. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
  4. ^ "Country's largest waterfall stops flowing after a giant sink hole swallows the Coca River". CuencaHighlife. 6 February 2020. Retrieved 6 December 2020.
  5. ^ José Paz Cardona, Antonio (12 August 2020). "Ecuador Races for Emergency Infrastructure as River's Collapse Threatens Dam". Retrieved December 6, 2020.