Gulf of Guayaquil
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Gulf of Guayaquil
Summary
Gulf of Guayaquil is a gulf[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 19 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Gulf of Guayaquil is in the country of Ecuador[3].
- Gulf of Guayaquil is in the country of Peru[4].
- Gulf of Guayaquil is on the body of water Pacific Ocean[5].
- Gulf of Guayaquil's instance of is recorded as gulf[6].
- Guayaquil is named after Gulf of Guayaquil[7].
- Gulf of Guayaquil's inflows is recorded as Guayas River[8].
- Gulf of Guayaquil's inflows is recorded as Zarumilla River[9].
- Gulf of Guayaquil's inflows is recorded as Tumbes River[10].
- Gulf of Guayaquil is part of Pacific Ocean[11].
- Gulf of Guayaquil's Commons category is recorded as Gulf of Guayaquil[12].
- Gulf of Guayaquil comprises Tumbes Bay[13].
- Gulf of Guayaquil's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': -3, 'lon': -80.5}[14].
- Gulf of Guayaquil's significant event is recorded as Joint Declaration on the International Recognition of the Gulf of Guayaquil as a Historic Bay[15].
- Gulf of Guayaquil's described by source is recorded as Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary[16].
- Gulf of Guayaquil's described by source is recorded as Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1926–1947)[17].
Body
Geography
Country listings include Ecuador[3], a sovereign state[18], in Ecuador[19], founded in 1809[20] and Peru[4], a sovereign state[21], in Peru[22], founded in 1821[23]. Gulf of Guayaquil is on the body of water Pacific Ocean[5]. It is part of Pacific Ocean[11].
Designation and Status
Gulf of Guayaquil's instance of is recorded as gulf[6].
History and Context
Guayaquil is named after Gulf of Guayaquil[7].
Why It Matters
Gulf of Guayaquil has Wikipedia articles in 19 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]