Rio
Grande
The
Rio
Grande
(called
the
Río
Bravo
or,
more
formally,
the
Río
Bravo
del
Norte
in
Mexico)
is
a
river
which
rises
in
the
San
Juan
Mountains
of
Colorado,
flows
through
the
San
Luis
Valley,
then
south
into
New
Mexico
through
Santa
Fe,
Albuquerque
and
Las
Cruces
to
El
Paso,
Texas
on
the
border
with
Mexico.
The
river
is
the
boundary
between
Mexico
and
the
United
States
from
El
Paso
to
the
Gulf
of
Mexico.
Major
cities
along
the
border
are
Ciudad
Juarez,
Mexico
across
the
river
from
El
Paso;
Laredo,
Texas
and
Nuevo
Laredo,
Mexico;
and
Brownsville,
Texas
and
Matamoros,
Mexico.
Other
notable
towns
along
the
river
are
Del
Rio
and
Eagle
Pass,
both
in
Texas.
Use
of
the
water
of
the
Rio
Grande
is
regulated
by
the
Rio
Grande
Compact,
an
interstate
compact
between
Colorado,
New
Mexico
and
Texas;
and
a
treaty
between
the
United
States
and
Mexico.
The
Rio
Grande
is
over-appropriated,
that
is,
there
are
more
users
for
the
water
than
there
is
water
in
the
river.
The
Rio
Grande
rises
in
high
mountains
and
flows
for
much
of
its
length
at
high
elevation;
El
Paso
is
3762
feet
above
sea
level.
While
in
New
Mexico
the
river
flows
through
the
Rio
Grande
Rift
from
one
sediment
filled
basin
to
another,
cutting
canyons
between
the
basins.
Anciently
the
Rio
Grande
terminated
at
the
bottom
of
the
Rio
Grande
Rift
in
Lake
Cabeza
de
Baca.
About
1
million
years
ago
the
stream
was
"captured
and
began
to
flow
eastward.
From
El
Paso
eastward
the
river
flows
through
desert.
Only
in
the
sub-tropical
lower
Rio
Grande
Valley
is
there
extensive
irrigated
agriculture.
The
river
ends
in
a
small
sandy
delta
on
the
Gulf
of
Mexico.
Photographs,
illustrations
and
clipart
at
Classroom
ClipArt.com
|