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Fucha River
River in Cundinamarca, Colombia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Fucha River is a river on the Bogotá savanna and a left tributary of the Bogotá River. The river originates in the Eastern Hills of the Colombian capital Bogotá and flows westward through the city into the Bogotá River. It is one of the three important rivers of the city, together with the Tunjuelo and Juan Amarillo Rivers.
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Etymology
Fucha is derived from Muysccubun, the indigenous language of the Muisca, who inhabited the Bogotá savanna before the Spanish conquest and means "her" or "female".[1]
Description
Source and mouth of the Fucha River on the Bogotá savanna
The Fucha River originates in the locality San Cristóbal in the Eastern Hills of Bogotá and is named in its upper course Quebrada Manzanares, San Cristóbal, Arzobispo and San Francisco River. It flows north from the Tunjuelo River westward and respectively forms the boundary between the localities Rafael Uribe Uribe (south) and Antonio Nariño (north) and Tunjuelito and Ciudad Bolivar (south) and Kennedy (north) of the Colombian capital and is canalised between the Carrera Séptima and the Avenida Boyacá. South of the locality Bosa, the Fucha River flows into the Bogotá River. The Fucha River is highly contaminated.[2]
Wetlands
Four of the fifteen protected wetlands of Bogotá are located in the Fucha River basin.
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Gallery
- Canalised part close to carrera 10
- Canalised part close to carrera 12
- Canalised part close to Ciudad Jardín
- Canalised part
- Bridge over the Fucha River
See also
References
External links
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