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Lacus Maracaibo

E Vicipaedia
-2 Latinitas huius rei dubia est. Corrige si potes. Vide {{latinitas}}.
Despectus in Lacum Maracaibo e spatio (STS-51-I) mense Augusto 1985. Septentriones ad laevum imum photographema videntur.
Tabula bathymetrica.
Pons Generalis Raphaeli Urdaneta.
Circuli virides in superficie lacus sunt plantae subfamiliae Lemnoidearum familiae Aracearum, plerumque generis Lemnae.
Scruta solida in litus vento impulsa.

Lacus Maracaibo[1] (Hispanice Lago de Maracaibo) est magnus sinus amarus (vel aestuarium) qui ad aestum pertinet in Venetiola et quidem "transitus Maris Caribici" est.[2][3][4][5][6] Plerumque habetur lacus, pro sinu vel lacuna.[7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15] Ad Sinum Venetiolanum coniungitur per Fretum Tablazo, quod in parte septentrionali est 5.5 chiliometra latum, sed non plus 4 metra altum. Impletur a multis fluminibus, quorum maximum est Catatumbo[16]. Area est 13 210 chiliometra quadrata. Hoc corpus aquae olim erat maximus Americae Australis lacus, secundum praeterea data geologica verus lacus, abhinc annorum a 20 ad 36 milliones unus ex veterrimis telluris lacubus.[17][18]

Fulgur Catatumbense[19] in Lacu Maracaibo plus fulgura quam alius orbis terrarum locus constanter efficit.[20][21]

  1. Ioannes de Laet, Nouus orbis seu Descriptionis Indiae occidentalis, 1633 (p. 689 apud Google Books). Vel Maracaybus, — Iohannes Iacobus Hofmannus, Lexicon universale (1698) ~, vol. IV, nomneclator; vel Maracaibensis, cf. binomina Orthalicus maracaibensis, Mytella m., Notodiaptomus m., Attalea m. etc.
  2. Anglice: "inlet of the Caribbean Sea."
  3. "Lake Maracaibo". Encyclopædia Britannica. 16 Iunii 2016 .
  4. Merriam-Webster (2016). Webster's New Geographical Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. p. 727. ISBN 0877794464 .
  5. Times Books (2014). Comprehensive Atlas of the World. HarperCollins. p. 47. ISBN 978000755140-8 .
  6. Question Unlimited (2003). "Who Wants to Be a Judge at the National Academic Championship?". National Academic Championship .
  7. John C. Murphy. "Marine Invasions by Non-Sea Snakes, with Thoughts on Terrestrial–Aquatic–Marine Transitions". Integr. Comp. Biol. (Oxford Journals Volume 52, Issue 2 Pp. 217-226.) (52 (2)): 217–226. 
  8. "Earth's New Lightning Capital Revealed". NASA 
  9. Wayne S. Gardner and Joann F. Cavaletto (1998). "Nitrogen cycling rates and light effects in tropical Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela". Limnol. Oceanogr. (American Society of Limnology) (43 (8)): 1814–1825 
  10. John P. Rafferty (1 October 2010). Lakes and Wetlands: A "Juvenile Nonfiction Book". Britannica Educational Publishing. p. 192. ISBN 978-1-61530-403-5 .
  11. Joyce A. Quinn; Susan L. Woodward (3 February 2015). Earth's Landscape: An Encyclopedia of the World's Geographic Features [2 volumes]: An Encyclopedia of the World's Geographic Features. ABC-CLIO. p. 397. ISBN 9781610694469 .
  12. DEME: Lake Maracaibo. Archivum interretiale..
  13. The Compass of Sigma Gamma Epsilon (1939:184)
  14. Ralph Alexander Liddle (1946:24). The Geology of Venezuela and Trinidad.
  15. Kenneth Knight Landes (1951:535), Petroleum Geology.
  16. "Praelatura Nullius Bertraniae in Catatumbo et dioecesi Cucutensi", — Acta Apostolicae Sedis, Vol. 9, pars 2, 1917. Codex iuris canonici. Pp. 926, 1109.
  17. Lake Profile: Maracaibo. LakeNet.
  18. Maracaibo, Lake. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition.
  19. Cf. binomina Aegiphila catatumbensis, Nupela catatumbensis.
  20. Baverstock, Alasdair (11 Martii 2015). "Venezuela’s nightly lightning show". The Guardian .
  21. Albrecht et al. 2016.

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