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Lake Maracaibo

Lake Maracaibo. By Michael Kerr. Founders of Lake Maracaibo. Discovered in 1499 by the Spanish explorer Alonso de Ojeda on a voyage with Amerigo Vespucci

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Lake Maracaibo

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  1. Lake Maracaibo By Michael Kerr

  2. Founders of Lake Maracaibo • Discovered in 1499 by the Spanish explorer Alonso de Ojeda on a voyage with Amerigo Vespucci • Legend has it that upon entering the lake, they found groups of indigenous huts, built over stilts on water ("palafitos" in Spanish), interconnected by boardwalks on stilts, with each other and with the lake shore • The Palafitos reminded the explorers of Venice, and the land discovered was given the name of "Venezuela", which means "Little Venice" in Spanish

  3. Lake Maracaibo • The lake is in Venezuela • The largest lake in South America (5,100 sq miles) • A strait, 34 mi long, connects it with the Gulf of Venezuela

  4. Lake Maracaibo Facts • It extends 110 miles inland • The lake lies in the extremely hot, humid lowlands of the Maracaibo basin • It is one of the oldest lakes in the world • The basin is one of the major oil-producing areas of the world

  5. Why Lake Maracaibo is Important • The oil capital of South America • Oil development began in 1918 • Tankers, of between 15,000 and 25,000 barrels of oil, made up to ten round trips per month • Supports 20,000 fishermen

  6. How Oil Affects Lake Maracaibo • When oil spills happen: • Dark oil slicks spread from the middle of the lake towards the shores, the wetlands, mangroves, beaches and docks • Oil gets in the fishing nets, coats the garbage dumped into the water, kills off wildlife, and drives away residents and tourists

  7. Present • Goajiros, the first known settlers, are still present in large numbers • Supplies 2/3 of Venezuela petroleum • There is some tourism in these crystal clear waters, in the south, with beautiful sunsets

  8. Past • The first productive well was drilled in 1917 • The deeper channel was completed in 1957 to allow ocean going ships and tankers to pass • Most of the oil industry was made by American, Dutch, and British investments • In 1975 the Venezuelan government took over the oil industry

  9. Present Harms to Lake Maracaibo • Duck weed • Boats engines get clogged with Duck Weed and makes it hard for small boat fishermen • Nets get clogged and fishermen accidentally discard fish and crustaceans • Oil • Oil spills • Dispersants used on oil slicks • Human activity is a large source of pollution

  10. Poverty in Lake Maracaibo • Lake Maracaibo is the oil capital of South America but its people are very poor • The government makes a lot of empty promises about villages getting food, medicine, education, job training, and more • Young children learn until 6th grade then the boys go fishing and the girls make babies • Most of the villages houses are huts without running water and electricity

  11. Works Cited • http://www.globalissues.org/news/2010/07/27/6426 • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Maracaibo • http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Lake_Maracaibo.aspx • http://www.counterpunch.org/kozloff05032010.html • Britannica encyclopedia, book 7, pg 811 • http://www.penambulbooks.com/Downloads/reporteng072204.pdf • http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=40181

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