Suárez River

Suárez River
Guane: Saravita
Suárez River close to Barbosa
Location of the Suárez River in Colombia
EtymologyGonzalo Suárez Rendón
Native nameRío Suárez (Spanish)
Location
CountryColombia
DepartmentCundinamarca, Boyacá, Santander
ProvincesUbaté, Western Boyacá, Ricaurte, Vélez, Comunera, Guanentá
MunicipalitiesFúquene, San Miguel de Sema, Chiquinquirá, Saboyá, Puente Nacional, Barbosa, Moniquirá, Güepsa, San José de Pare, Santana, San Benito, Suaita, El Guacamayo, Guadalupe, Contratación, Chima, Guapotá, Palmas del Socorro, Socorro, Simacota, San Gil, Palmar, Cabrera, Barichara, Galán, Zapatoca, Villanueva
Physical characteristics
SourceLake Fúquene
  locationFúquene
  coordinates5°29′11.9″N 73°46′07.8″W / 5.486639°N 73.768833°W / 5.486639; -73.768833
  elevation2,537.72 m (8,325.9 ft)
MouthSogamoso River
  location
Villanueva
  coordinates
6°46′06.7″N 73°11′54.9″W / 6.768528°N 73.198583°W / 6.768528; -73.198583
  elevation
700 m (2,300 ft)
Length172 km (107 mi)
Basin size98,230 km2 (37,930 sq mi)
Discharge 
  locationSaboyá
  average8 m3/s (280 cu ft/s)
  minimum1 m3/s (35 cu ft/s)
  maximum12 m3/s (420 cu ft/s)
Basin features
River systemSogamoso River
 Magdalena Basin
  Caribbean Sea
Tributaries 
  leftSusa, Simijaca, Chiquinquirá
  rightLenguazaque, Q. Aguaclara, Moniquirá, Ubasa, Fonce
WaterbodiesLake Fúquene

The Suárez River, originally Saravita, is a river in the Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes. The river originates in Lake Fúquene on the border of Cundinamarca and Boyacá and its mouth is the confluence with the Chicamocha River, forming the Sogamoso River in Santander. It is part of the Magdalena Basin flowing towards the Caribbean Sea.

The 172 kilometres (107 mi) long river is one of the longest on the Altiplano Cundiboyacense and forms the natural borders of Cundinamarca and Boyacá and Boyacá and Santander in its upstream and downstream part respectively. The river formed the trajectory for the Spanish conquest of the Muisca, when the conquistadors went uphill into the Andes from the tropical lowlands of Barrancabermeja in the north. The difference in altitude along the river course, from 2,538 metres (8,327 ft) at the source to 700 metres (2,300 ft) at its mouth, in its 98,230 square kilometres (37,930 sq mi) large basin causes climatic variations, especially with respect to precipitation. The frequent floodings of the river have given the Suárez River its name; conquistador Gonzalo Suárez Rendón tried to cross the river in one of his conquest expeditions, but the sudden flooding made his horse drown in the Suárez River.