Coeroeni River

The Coeroeni River is a river in South America. It arises in the Tumuc-Humac Mountains, which forms the drainage divide between Pará, Brazil, and Suriname; from there it flows northward. The river is fed by the Aramatau, Kutari and Sipaliwini River.[1] The Coeroeni goes on to form the border of the disputed Tigri Area[2] by Guyana and Suriname.[3] It eventually flows into the Courantyne River, which forms the international boundary between Guyana–Suriname.[1]

Coeroeni
Coeroeni is the middle on the left.
Physical characteristics
SourceConfluence of the Sipaliwini and Kutari River
  coordinates2.3447°N 56.8730°W / 2.3447; -56.8730
MouthCourentyne River
  coordinates
3.3688°N 57.6514°W / 3.3688; -57.6514

While there's little dispute of the lower Corentyne marking the division between the two countries, however confusion arose where the river splits to the west as the New River or the east Coeroeni. Which one is deemed the proper upper Corentyne was between the expedition of Robert H. Schomburgk, and later Barrington Brown who found the New River.[4]

Notes

  1. Encyclopaedia, p. 228 - Corantijn.
  2. "De Telegraaf van dinsdag 19-08-1969". Krant van uw Geboortedag (in Dutch). 19 August 1969. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  3. Encyclopaedia, p. 331 - Grenzen van Suriname en grenskwestiën.
  4. Sluiter, Engel (1933). "Dutch Guiana: A Problem in Boundaries". The Hispanic American Historical Review. 13 (1): 13–22. doi:10.2307/2506542. ISSN 0018-2168.

References

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