Ptari-tepui

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 2400 m above sea level. Its mostly bare summit plateau has an area of 1.25 sqkm. Though generally flat, distinctive erosional rock formations are found on the more dissected eastern edge of the summit.

Description
Ptari-tepui gives its name to the Ptari Massif, which also includes Carrao-tepui to the northeast and a long ridge known as Sororopán-tepui to the southeast. As a whole, the massif has a summit area of around 2.5 sqkm and an estimated slope area of 58 sqkm (Carrao and Ptari together contributing 28 sqkm and Sororopán, which is derived from a separate basement, a further 30 sqkm). The massif is situated entirely within the bounds of Canaima National Park.

Ptari-tepui is a prime example of the classic tepui shape, having an almost perfectly flat-topped summit and near-vertical walls. This characteristic profile is said to recall the shape of a budare, a type of griddle used for making cassava bread, and is the source of its Pemón-derived name. For this reason it is also sometimes known as Cerro Budare or Cerro del Budare.