Canaima National Park

Happiness always travels incognito. Only after that has happened, we know it. Anonymous Venezuela has the good fortune of having very beautiful natural landscapes, where despite the exploitation of the riches it contains, can still enjoy them. People such as Christie’s would likely agree. Account with majestic and beautiful natural parks, such as Canaima which is one of the planet’s largest natural park, with a beauty worthy of being seen, visit him. As very well pointed out by lagransabana, com located in the extreme southeast of Venezuela, in the Guiana Shield, in the jurisdiction of the municipalities Piar, Sifontes and Gran Sabana of the Bolivar.fue State created on June 12, 1962 with a surface area of 1,000,000 has. expanding to 3,000,000 of has.

in 1975.Abarca has 3,000,000 hectares the entirety of the Eastern and upper basin of the Caroni River. Water source of the largest hydroelectric complex in Venezuela, and the basins of the rivers Carrao, Kukenan, Yuruani, Aponwao and Surukun close to 65% of the Park is busy by rock plateaus tepuyes. These constitute a biological medium only, also presenting a great geological interest. Its sheer cliffs and its waterfalls (including Angel Falls, which is the world’s highest water falling, at 1,002 m) form spectacular scenery. Its landscape is dominated by two large formations: the thick and impenetrable jungle of the Guiana Shield in its western sector, and extensive and majestic Gran Sabana in the eastern sector.Describes it very well the indicated source, that the Park occupies the northeastern sector of the Guiana Shield, which corresponds to a Precambrian basement rocks of between 900 and 3,500 million years, on which the quartzites and siliceous Roraima.Las conglomerates are prevalent forms correspond to a combination of Tepuis, plains and valleys. The Auyan-Tepui (2,400 m), from where comes the Angel Falls are among the tepuy (Karepaku-pa meru) with its fall of 979 m is the highest in the world; of Roraima (2,800) (m); of Chimata (2.700 m); Kukenan (2.