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Tourists enjoy South America's Iguazu Falls
From walkways and bridges, viewers can count about 270 water falls almost 100 meters (330 feet) high at South America's Iguazu Falls.
- In this March 14, 2015 photo, Brazilians Lilian and Edgardo kiss in the spray of Iguazu Falls in Brazil. Local indigenous legend has it that serpent god Boi, furious over a broken heart, created the falls by shattering the Iguazu riverâs flow to prevent the maiden Naipu from escaping in a canoe with her lover Taroba. The legend says the rainbows that grace the waters are the souls of Naipu and Taroba reuniting. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)read more
- In this March 15, 2015 photo, tourists visit Iguazu Falls in Brazil. Spaniards came across the Iguazu Falls in 1541. The falls are part of the world's largest reservoir of fresh water, known as the Guarani Aquifer. They are in the middle of thick jungle that has more than 1,000 plant and hundreds of animal species. Millions of tourists visit the falls each year on both sides of the border. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)read more
- In this March 15, 2015 photo, tourists wear plastic ponchos as they try to stay dry in the spray of Iguazu Falls in Brazil. From above, the Iguazu Falls resemble a massive hole in a river surrounded by thick jungle. Spray from the falls douses the nearby viewing areas where some tourists don rain ponchos while others take off their shirts and dance and hug in the drenching mist. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)read more
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Tourists enjoy South America's Iguazu Falls
From walkways and bridges, viewers can count about 270 water falls almost 100 meters (330 feet) high at South America's Iguazu Falls.
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- Tourists enjoy South America's Iguazu Falls
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