At the meeting point of three exotic countries of south America, there crawls a long, large, and shallow serpentine river in the jungle. This film of ocean suddenly turns into a violent stream now rushing in a narrow, tubular river path, a fraction of its size a contorsion ago, as a precipice opens unsuspectingly in its liquid belly. As seen from a satellite, this terrible encounter of massive loads of waters with the abyss reveals itself as a gigantic cloud of chaos breaking louse in the calm waters. Its violence, even if confined to a few pixels, rush at you through the sky. It is like a still tornado, a pinned hurricane, a tempest trapped to a rock. This is the Devil's throat, the Garganta do Diabo. This is the closest one can get of seeing a star, of embracing a cyclone. This is nature at the wildest it can get without killing you.

<googlemap version="0.9" lat="-25.694905" lon="-54.437771" zoom="14"> -25.695587, -54.436832 The Garganta do Diabo. </googlemap>

The panorama below is that of another world. It's an eerie, dreamlike, science-fiction setting. The image does not convey, it looks dark, shadowy and cold. It was a soul gripping sight. I don't find the adjectives for it. Thrilling should be one of them.

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The Devil's throat seems to deserve its name. It is so incredibly powerful, it rushes tons of water into the void, the sound, the intensity, the speed of it...

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There are scores of astoundingly impressive waterfalls, coming in incredible variety of shapes, intensity, character. The place is like an encyclopedia of waterfalls. You can get pretty close from many. All provide unique, breathtaking backgrounds for your pictures, if you are for dramatic effects. In the following gallery, you will have to excuse us of being on virtually all the pictures.

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Gallery