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Southern Dos Patos Lagoon, Brazil June 1998. The sediment-laden Rio Grande
empties into the Dos Patos Lagoon and eventually into the Atlantic Ocean.
The Dos Patos (center of image) is a shallow tidal lagoon separated from
the Atlantic Ocean by a wide sandbar or sandy peninsula. The peninsula has
an average width of 15 miles (24 km). Barely discernible and entering the
scene from the bottom center (southwest) is a canal or river that flows
generally northward from the Mirin Lagoon (not on image) to the city of
Pelotas (midway between the left center and bottom left) and empties into
the southern portion of the Dos Patos Lagoon. The Mirin Lagoon's darker
waters can be seen mixing with the muddy waters of the Dos Patos Lagoon
as they both head in the direction of the Atlantic Ocean. The waters in
these lagoons has been degraded by increased industrial and domestic effluents
during last three decades. Efforts are underway by the government of Brazil
to reduce these effluents.
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