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Guanabara Bay

Coordinates: 22°47′25″S 43°9′20″W / 22.79028°S 43.15556°W / -22.79028; -43.15556
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(Redirected from Baía de Guanabara)
Guanabara Bay
Baía de Guanabara (Portuguese)
Guanabara Bay is located in Rio de Janeiro
Guanabara Bay
Guanabara Bay
Satellite image of Guanabara Bay
LocationRio de Janeiro, Brazil
Coordinates22°47′25″S 43°9′20″W / 22.79028°S 43.15556°W / -22.79028; -43.15556
TypeBay
River sources
Ocean/sea sourcesSouth Atlantic
Max. length31 km (19 mi)
Max. width28 km (17 mi)
Surface area412 km2 (159 sq mi)
IslandsIlha do Governador, Ilha de Paquetá, Freguesia
SettlementsRio de Janeiro, Niterói, Duque de Caxias, São Gonçalo

Guanabara Bay (Portuguese: baía de Guanabara, baía da Guanabara,[1] [ɡwɐ̃nɐˈbaɾɐ]) is an oceanic bay located in Southeast Brazil in the state of Rio de Janeiro. On its western shore lie the cities of Rio de Janeiro and Duque de Caxias, and on its eastern shore are the cities of Niterói and São Gonçalo. Four other municipalities surround the bay's shores. Guanabara Bay is the second largest bay in area in Brazil (after the All Saints' Bay), at 412 square kilometres (159 sq mi), with a perimeter of 143 kilometres (89 mi).

Guanabara Bay is 31 kilometres (19 mi) long and 28 kilometres (17 mi) wide at its maximum. Its 1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi) wide mouth is flanked at the eastern tip by the Pico do Papagaio (Parrot's Peak) and the western tip by Pão de Açúcar (Sugar Loaf).

The name Guanabara comes from the Tupi language, goanã-pará, from gwa "bay", plus "similar to" and ba'ra "sea".[citation needed] Other glosses include hidden water,[2] lagoon of the sea,[3] and bosom of the sea.[4]

History

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View of Rio de Janeiro from Guanabara Bay (early 20th century picture).

Guanabara Bay was first encountered by Europeans on January 1, 1502, when Portuguese explorers Gaspar de Lemos and Gonçalo Coelho[5] arrived on its shores. According to some historians,[6] the name given by the exploration team to the bay was originally Ria de Janeiro ("January's Ria"). Then confusion took place between the words ria and rio ("river"). As a result, the name of the bay was soon fixed as Rio de Janeiro. Later, the city was named after the bay. Natives of the Tamoio and Tupiniquim tribes inhabited the shores of the bay.

After the initial arrival of the Portuguese, no significant European settlements were established until French colonists and soldiers, under the Huguenot Admiral Nicolas Durand de Villegaignon invaded the region in 1555 to establish the France Antarctique. They stayed briefly on Lajes Island, then moved to Serigipe Island, near the shore, where they built Fort Coligny. After they were expelled by Portuguese military expeditions in 1563, the colonial government built fortifications in several points of Guanabara Bay, rendering it almost impregnable against a naval attack from the sea. They were the Santa Cruz, São João, Lajes and Villegaignon forts, forming a fearsome crossfire rectangle of big naval guns. Other islands were adapted by the Navy to host naval storehouses, hospitals, drydocks, oil reservoirs and the National Naval Academy.

Underwater exploration in the bay was disallowed by the Brazilian government in 1985 amid a dispute with American writer and treasure hunter Robert Marx, who claimed to have found evidence of a Roman shipwreck.[7] Carl Feagans tells of 16 amphorae made for antiques-lover Americo Santarelli in 1960 or 1961, all 16 of which deliberately sunk in the bay for them to acquire the look of ancient artefacts covered in barnacles and corals; 4 of the 16 original amphorae were subsequently recovered, leaving 12 scattered about the bay, where two were found by lobster divers in 1974.[8]

Description

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Guanabara Bay seen from Christ the Redeemer.

There are more than 130 islands dotting the bay, including:

Guanabara Bay seen from Sugarloaf Mountain.

The bay is crossed by the Rio-Niterói Bridge (13.29 kilometres (8.26 mi) long and with a central span 72 metres (236 ft) high) and there is heavy boat and ship traffic, including regular ferryboat lines. The Port of Rio de Janeiro, as well as the city's two airports, Galeão - Antônio Carlos Jobim International Airport (on Governador Island) and Santos Dumont Airport (on reclaimed land next to downtown Rio), are located on its shores. The Federal University of Rio de Janeiro main campus is located on the artificial Fundão Island. A maze of smaller bridges interconnect the two largest islands, Fundão and Governador, to the mainland.

There is an Environmental Protection Area (APA), which is located mostly in the municipality of Guapimirim and given the name of Guapimirim APA.

Environment

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Guanabara Bay's once rich and diversified ecosystem has suffered extensive damage in recent decades, particularly along its mangrove areas.[9] The bay has been heavily impacted by urbanization, deforestation, and pollution of its waters with sewage, garbage, and oil spills. As of 2014, more than 70% of the sewage from 12 million inhabitants of Rio de Janeiro now flows into the bay untreated.[10]

There have been three major oil spills in Guanabara Bay. The most recent was in 2000 when a leaking Petrobras underwater pipeline released 1,300,000 litres (340,000 US gal) of oil into the bay, destroying large swaths of the mangrove ecosystem. Recovery measures are currently[when?] being attempted, but more than a decade after the incident, the mangrove areas have not returned to life.[needs update]

One of the world's largest landfills is located at Jardim Gramacho adjacent to Guanabara Bay. It was closed in 2012 after 34 years of operation. The landfill attracted attention from environmentalists and it supported 1,700 people scavenging for recyclable materials.[11]

View of Rio de Janeiro from Guanabara Bay

In June 2014, Dutch windsurfer and former Olympic and world champion Dorian van Rijsselberghe made an urgent appeal to government and industry in the Netherlands to collaborate in cleaning up the bay, together with the Plastic Soup Foundation.[12][13] The Dutch government picked up the message and formulated a Clean Urban Delta Initiative Rio de Janeiro together with a consortium of Dutch industry, knowledge institutes and NGOs which will be presented to the Brazilian authorities in the State of Rio de Janeiro.

As part of the preparations for the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio, the government was supposed to improve the conditions, but progress has been slow. There have been concerns that the efforts may only be short-term and abandoned following the Games, as there would be little political incentive to continue with them.[14]

The marine ecosystem of Guanabara Bay was severely damaged;[15] the bay was once a whaling ground,[16][17][18] and today, whales are no longer or rarely seen while Bryde's whales can be seen around the bay entrance.[19][20][21][22] The bay is also home to a population of botos[23][24] and this population faces severe risks of population decline.[25]

References

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  1. ^ Guanabarino | Michaelis On-line
  2. ^ Franco, Paulo (2014). Diversity – The Brazilian Essence: Knowing Brazil By the Culture of Their People. Lulu.com. pp. 47–49. ISBN 9781483412559. Retrieved 3 January 2018.
  3. ^ Travel, D. K. (12 January 2016). DK Eyewitness Travel Guide Brazil (First American Edition, 2007 ed.). p. 92. ISBN 9781465452016. Retrieved 3 January 2018.
  4. ^ Museum of Tomorrow (PDF). p. 47. Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 January 2018. Retrieved 3 January 2018. Of the indigenous tribes that lived along its banks, there are now only reports, a few middens and the original Tupi-Guarani names that continue to identify the geographical features and places along its shores, starting with its own name, Guanabara, or "bosom of the sea"...
  5. ^ (in Portuguese) Jorge Couto, 1995, A Construção do Brasil, Lisbon: Cosmos.
  6. ^ (in Portuguese) Vasco Mariz, 2006, "Os Fundadores do Rio de Janeiro: Vespucci, Villegagnon ou Estácio de Sá?", in Brasil-França. Relações históricas no período colonial, Rio de Janeiro: Biblioteca do Exército, p. 80.
  7. ^ Simons, Marlise (June 25, 1985). "Underwater Exploring is Banned in Brazil". The New York Times. section C. p. 3.
  8. ^ Feagans, Carl (August 23, 2019). "Pre-Columbian Explorers in the Americas: The Flaccid Evidence". Retrieved 2024-08-19.
  9. ^ "Grassroot efforts lead the clean-up of Brazil's Guanabara Bay ahead of Rio 2016". The Guardian. 1 June 2015.
  10. ^ "'Super bacteria' found in Rio's Olympic waters". AP News. 15 December 2014.
  11. ^ Barchfield, Jenny (5 June 2012). "Rio closes massive Jardim Gramacho dump". TV3. Archived from the original on 7 March 2014. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  12. ^ "Een baai vol shit opruimen die hap - Life of Dorian". Dorian van Rijsselberghe.
  13. ^ "No Plastic in Our Water or Our Bodies". 5 April 2018.
  14. ^ Carneiro, Julia (10 January 2014). "Rio's Olympic waters blighted by heavy pollution". BBC News. Retrieved 12 January 2014.
  15. ^ Ruback C.. 2009. Saiba mais sobre a Baía de Guanabara. R7 (pt). Retrieved on September 18, 2017
  16. ^ HISTÓRICO - A PONTA DA ARMAÇÃO. Casa d’Armas da Ponta da Armação Archived 2011-12-17 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on September 18, 2017
  17. ^ Jorge S.. 2013. Baleias na Baía da Guanabara. Primeira Leitura. Retrieved on September 18, 2017
  18. ^ Barata C. . 2010. Rio Antigo - Pesca da Baleia 1790c LJ. YouTube. Retrieved on September 18, 2017
  19. ^ Rio, Mariucha MachadoDo G1 (13 March 2014). "Final de verão do Rio tem 'rolezinho' de baleias em busca de comida" [Late summer in Rio has whale watching in search of food]. Rio de Janeiro (in Portuguese).{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  20. ^ Lodi L.. 2016. Baleia-de-bryde: Navegando com as gigantes. Blog ECONSERV – Ecologia, Conservação e Serviços. Retrieved on September 18, 2017
  21. ^ Lima D. L.. 2016. Frequentes na orla do Rio neste verão, baleias-de-bryde despertam curiosidade.Globo.com. Retrieved on September 18, 2017
  22. ^ Lodi, Liliane; Tardin, Rodrigo H.; Hetzel, Bia; Maciel, Israel S.; Figueiredo, Luciana D.; Simão, Sheila M. (April 2015). "Bryde's whale (Cetartiodactyla: Balaenopteridae) occurrence and movements in coastal areas of southeastern Brazil". Zoologia (Curitiba). 32 (2): 171–175. doi:10.1590/S1984-46702015000200009.
  23. ^ Ruback C.. 2009. Botos lutam para sobreviver na Baía de Guanabara. R7. Retrieved on September 18, 2017
  24. ^ ESPECIAL CETÁCEOS - BALEIAS: POR QUE PROTEGÊ-LAS?. Pick-upau. Retrieved on September 18, 2017
  25. ^ Dale J.. 2016. População de golfinhos da Baía de Guanabara sofre redução de 90% em três décadas. Globo.com. Retrieved on September 18, 2017

Further reading

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Media related to
Guanabara Bay
at Wikimedia Commons