- The
Polochic River (Spanish pronunciation: [poloˈtʃik]) is a 194-kilometre-long (121 mi)
river in
eastern Guatemala. The 194
kilometers long
river flows...
- The Chixoy-
Polochic Fault, also
known as Cuilco-Chixoy-
Polochic Fault, is a
major fault zone in
Guatemala and
southeast Mexico. It runs in a
light arc...
- The
transform fault continues ons**** as the
Polochic-Motagua
fault system,
which consists of the
Polochic and
Motagua faults. This
system continues on...
-
designated the "Motagua-
Polochic system"
rather than as a
discrete single boundary. The
Polochic fault (also
referred to as the Chixoy-
Polochic Fault) lies north...
- 2009.
Another ons****
continuation of the
Cayman Trough is the Chixoy-
Polochic Fault,
which runs
parallel to, and
roughly 80
kilometers (50 mi) to the...
- 04237.x. White, RA (1985). "The
Guatemala earthquake of 1816 on the Chixoy-
Polochic fault".
Bulletin of the
Seismological Society of America. 75 (2): 455–73...
- (145,700 acres; 227.6 sq mi) and a
maximum depth of 18 m (59 ft). The
Polochic River is the
largest river that
drains into the lake. The lake,
which is...
-
Cocos Ridge. On the
landward side, the
division is
demarcated along the
Polochic-Motagua
fault system (see
Motagua Fault), the
boundary between the North...
-
Semuc Champey and
Santa María Cahabón
below which it
joins the
smaller Polochic River. The Cahabón has
whitewater reaches, with
class III and IV rapids...
- in the
Guatemalan department of Alta Verapaz. It is
located in the hot
Polochic River valley. It was
originally part of the muni****lity of Panzós, but...