Puneet Varma (Editor)

Marajó

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Location
  
Amazon River

Length
  
297 km (184.5 mi)

Highest elevation
  
40 m (130 ft)

Area
  
40,100 km²

Area rank
  
35th

Width
  
204 km (126.8 mi)

Highest point
  
Breves (city)

Marajó feriadopessoalcomwpcontentuploads201306ilha

Destinations
  
Soure, Pará, Salvaterra, Breves, Pará

Points of interest
  
Marajó, Praia do Pesqueiro, Praia da Barra Velha, Vila do Pesqueiro, Praia Grande

Similar
  
Ver‑o‑peso, Museu Paraense Emílio Go, Fernando de Noronha, Círio de Nossa Senhora, Forte do Castelo de Belém

Marajo island ilha de maraj a place to visit in brazil


Marajó ([ˈiʎɐ dʒi maɾaˈʒɔ]) is a coastal island located in the state of Pará, Brazil. The island is bordered by the Amazon river to the west and northwest, the Atlantic Ocean to the northeast and by the Pará River to the east.

Contents

Map of Maraj%C3%B3, State of Par%C3%A1, Brazil

With a land area of 40,100 square kilometres (15,500 sq mi) Marajó is comparable in size to Switzerland. It is approximately 295 kilometres (183 mi) long and 200 kilometres (120 mi) wide.

The island is known for the pororoca, a tidal bore phenomenon in the river that creates large waves reaching 4 m (13 ft) in height. It is a tourist destination, especially among surfing enthusiasts.

T de folga conhe a a ilha de maraj pa


Geography

The northeast coastline of Marajó faces the Atlantic Ocean. The outflow from the Amazon between January and July is so great that the sea at the mouth is made up of fresh water for some distance from shore. The city of Belém lies to the south across the southern fork (also called the Pará River) of the river's mouth. The island sits almost directly on the equator.

Together with smaller neighboring islands, separated from Marajó by rivers, it forms the Marajó Archipelago, with an aggregate area of 49,602 square kilometres (19,151 sq mi). The archipelago is contained in the 59,985 square kilometres (23,160 sq mi) Marajó Archipelago Environmental Protection Area, a sustainable use conservation unit established in 1989 to protect the environment of the delta region.

Large parts of the islands are flooded during the rainy season because of higher water levels of the Amazon River along the coast and heavy rainfall in the interior. Marajó is almost entirely flat. During the rainy season, much of the island becomes flooded as a large lake.

The east side of the island is dominated by savanna vegetation. There are large fazendas with animal husbandry. This is also the location of Lake Arari, which has an area of 400 square kilometres (150 sq mi) but shrinks by 80% during the dry season. There are large herds of domesticated water buffalo on the island. The west side of the island is characterized by Várzea forests and small farms. Lumber and açaí are produced there.

The island is in the Marajó várzea ecoregion, an area of seasonally and tidally flooded várzea forest. To the north of the large savanna area are palm swamps, mainly with Buriti Palm (Mauritia flexuosa) and Euterpe oleracea. During the rainy season, the swamps are flooded one meter high. Little is known about the ecology of these swamps.

There are 20 large rivers on the island. Because of the changing water levels and regular seasonal flooding, many settlements are built on stilts (Palafitas).

Municipalities

The most important towns are in the southeast of the island: Soure, Salvaterra, and the largest city, Breves. They feature a basic touristic infrastructure and are popular because of the generous, lightly populated beaches. The city of Soure, on the island's Atlantic Coast, serves as an entry point to the island via its ferry link to Belém.

The island is shared by 16 municipalities of three microregions:

  • Microregion of Arari:
  • Cachoeira do Arari
  • Chaves
  • Muaná
  • Ponta de Pedras
  • Salvaterra
  • Santa Cruz do Arari
  • Soure
  • Microregion of Furos de Breves:
  • Afuá
  • Anajás
  • Breves
  • Curralinho
  • São Sebastião da Boa Vista
  • Microregion of Portel:
  • Bagre
  • Gurupá
  • Melgaço
  • Portel
  • History

    The island was the site of an advanced pre-Columbian society, the Marajoara culture, which existed from approximately 400 BC to 1600 AD The island has been a center of archaeological exploration and scholarship since the 19th century. Scholars from the 1980s forward have divided the pre-Columbian period into the Ananatuba phase (c. 1100–c. 200 BC), the Mangueiras phase (c. 1000 BC–c. 100 AD), the Formiga phase (c. 100-400 AD), the Marajoará phase (c. 400-1200 AD), and the Aruã phase (1200-1500 AD).

    Marajó had a population of approximately 40,000 people until the arrival of the Portuguese in the 16th century. The population lived in homes with tamped earth floors. They were organized into matrilineal clans. Tasks were divided by sex, age, and skill level.

    The arrival of the Europeans was catastrophic to the indigenous population of the island; 90% died due to high mortality from Eurasian infectious diseases; they lacked immunity against these diseases, which had become endemic in European and Asian cities.

    But, in the 1918–1919 pandemic worldwide of the Spanish influenza, Marajó was the only major populated area not to have any documented cases of the illness.

    The island is also the location of the Roman Catholic Territorial Prelature of Marajó.

    References

    Marajó Wikipedia