5°29′10″N 59°47′53″W / 5.48611°N 59.79806°W King Edward VIII Falls is an 260-metre-tall (850 ft) single plunge waterfall found on the Semang River in the Potaro-Siparuni highlands, southern Guyana, named for Edward VIII.
Waterfall has formed on the escarpment of Pacaraima Mountains and has eroded the Precambrian quartzite and conglomerate, forming an amphitheatre.[1] Falls was noted by explorer Paul A. Zahl in 1935 and a photograph of the falls is found in his book, "To the Lost World".[2] This remote area is seldom visited.
This waterfall often is confused with another waterfall - a lengthy set of rapids on the New River (itself a major tributary to the Corentyne River) named King Edward VI Falls (not to be confused with King George VI Falls, a tall plunge near the Venezuelan border).[3] There are several falls in Guyana that are named after kings and this has created some long standing confusion.
YouTube Encyclopedic
-
1/2Views:202 619556
-
Lady Jane (1986) Part 5/14
-
GWR175: 'Nunney Castle' & 'King Edward I' at West Drayton on 'The Cornish Riviera'
Transcription
References
- ^ "King Edward VIII Falls". Wondermondo.
- ^ Zahl, Paul A. (1939). To the Lost World. New York: Knopf.
- ^ "King Edward VIII Falls". World Waterfall Database.