Category
page 1Tepuis of Venezuela
Mount Roraima
High plateau in South America

Auyán Tepuy
Auyán-tepui (), also spelled Ayan, is a tepui in Bolívar state, Venezuela. It is the most visited and one of the largest (but not the highest) tepuis in the Guiana Highlands, with a summit area of and an estimated slope area of .
Kukenán Tepuy
Kukenán, also known as Matawi or Cuquenán, is a tepui in Bolívar State, Guayana Region, Venezuela. It has an estimated surface area of 2185 hectares (equivalent to 21.85 square kilometres). It is high and about 3 km (1.9 mi) long. Kukenan Falls, which is high, is located at the south end of the tepui.

Ptarí Tepuy
Ptari-tepui, also spelled Pu-tari and sometimes called Cerro Budare or Cerro del Budare, is a tepui in Bolívar state, Venezuela. Lying near the centre of the Sierra de Lema, it has a maximum elevation of around above sea level. Its mostly bare summit plateau has an area of . Though generally flat, distinctive erosional rock formations are found on the more dissected eastern edge of the summit.
Cerro de la Neblina
sandstone massif located in the northern Amazon Basin
Mount Sarisariñama
mountain in Venezuela
Cerro Duida
mountain in Venezuela
Upuigma Tepuy
Upuigma-tepui, also known as El Castillo, is a tepui in Bolívar state, Venezuela. A relatively isolated peak, both it and nearby Angasima-tepui lie just south of the vast Chimantá Massif, from which they are separated by the Río Aparurén valley. Upuigma-tepui is situated entirely within the bounds of Canaima National Park.
Yuruaní Tepuy
Yuruaní-tepui, also known by the Pemón name Iwalkarima, Iwalecalima or Iwarkárima, is a tepui of the Eastern Tepuis chain primarily situated in Venezuela, while part of the eastern ridge stretches across the border with Guyana and into the contested Essequibo region. It has an elevation of around , the high plateau being located entirely within Venezuela, and a summit area of . It lies just east of the much smaller Wadakapiapué-tepui. This Tepui is not located in the Canaima National Park unlike most other Tepuis in the area.
Aprada Tepuy
Aprada-tepui is a tepui in Bolívar state, Venezuela. It has an elevation of around above sea level. It gives its name to the Aprada Massif, which also includes the smaller Araopán-tepui to the east. A steep, semi-circular ridge connects these two summits. Aprada-tepui lies northwest of the much larger Chimantá Massif and around east of the Pemón village of Urimán.
Cerro Huachamacari
mountain in Venezuela
Aparamán Tepuy
Aparamán-tepui is the westernmost of the four main tepuis of the Los Testigos chain in Bolívar, Venezuela. While the other three tepuis share a common slope area, Aparamán is derived from a separate basement. Aparamán-tepui has an elevation of around , a summit area of , and an estimated slope area of . Its mostly bare summit plateau is highly dissected, presenting difficulties even for helicopter landings.
Uei-tepui
Uei-tepui, also known as Wei-tepui, Cerro El Sol or Serra do Sol is a tepui on the border between Brazil and Venezuela. It may be considered the southernmost member of the Eastern Tepuis chain.
Cerro Aracamuni
mountain in Venezuela
Cerro Marahuaca
mountain in Venezuela
Cerro Jaua
mountain in Venezuela
Cerro Autana
mountain in Venezuela
Wadakapiapué-tepui
Wadakapiapué-tepui, also spelled Wadakapiapö, Wadakapiapo, Wadaka Piapo or Guadacapiapui, is a tepui of the Eastern Tepuis chain in Bolívar, Venezuela. It has an elevation of around . Its tiny tower-like summit has an area of less than , making it the smallest member of the Eastern Tepuis. It lies just west of the much larger Yuruaní-tepui.
Wei Tepuy
mountain in Venezuela
Taraipá Tepuy
mountain in Venezuela
Carrao Tepuy
Carrao-tepui, also spelled Karrao, is a tepui in Bolívar state, Venezuela. It has a maximum elevation of around and its densely forested summit plateau covers an area of . Part of the Ptari Massif, it lies just northeast of neighbouring Ptari-tepui, with which it shares a common slope area of , and north of the large ridge known as Sororopán-tepui.
Tramen Tepuy
mountain in Venezuela
Cerro Avispa
Karaurín Tepuy
Karaurín-tepui, also spelled Caraurín, is a tepui of the Eastern Tepuis chain in Bolívar state, Venezuela, just along the border with neighboring Guyana. It has a maximum elevation of around above sea level. The summit plateau is covered by shrubby vegetation and has an area of . The foothills of the tepui are covered in forests. Karaurín-tepui lies just south of the much larger Ilú–Tramen Massif.
Cerro Sororopán
Sororopán-tepui is a long ridge in Bolívar state, Venezuela. It has a maximum elevation of around and its densely forested slopes cover an estimated area of . The ridge has a southwest–northeast orientation and is characterised by a steep southern face. Part of the Ptari Massif, it lies just south of Carrao-tepui and neighbouring Ptari-tepui.
Araopán Tepuy
Araopán-tepui is a tepui in Bolívar state, Venezuela. It has an elevation of around above sea level. Together with the larger Aprada-tepui to the west, it forms part of the Aprada Massif. A steep, semi-circular ridge connects these two summits.
Murisipán Tepuy
Murisipán-tepui, also spelled Murosipán or Murochiopán, is one of the four main tepuis of the Los Testigos chain in Bolívar, Venezuela. Looking west to east, it is the second major peak of the massif and is connected to the next two—Tereke-yurén-tepui and Kamarkawarai-tepui—by a common basement (the westernmost peak, Aparamán-tepui, is relatively isolated by comparison). Murisipán-tepui has an elevation of around and a summit area of . The mountain's mostly bare summit plateau has a small, seasonal lagoon near its centre.
Angasima Tepuy
Angasima-tepui, also known as Adanta, Adankasima or Adankachimö, is a tepui in Bolívar state, Venezuela. A relatively isolated peak, both it and nearby Upuigma-tepui lie just south of the vast Chimantá Massif, from which they are separated by the Río Aparurén valley. Amurí-tepui, the closest member of the Chimantá Massif, is only from Angasima-tepui.