- Atacama redirects here; for the political-administrative region of Chile, see
Atacama Region.
The Atacama Desert is a virtually rainless plateau in
South America, extending 966 km (600 mi) between the Andes
mountains and the Pacific Ocean. It is created by the rain
shadow of the Andes east of the desert. Its area is 181,300 square kilometers (70,000 mi²)[1], in northern Chile. It is made up of
salt basins (salares), sand and lava flows, and is 15 million
years old and 100 times more arid than California's Death Valley.
Scene from Valle de la Luna (Moon Valley) near San Pedro de Atacama.
Driest desert
The Atacama Desert is the driest place on Earth, and is virtually sterile
because it is blocked from moisture on both sides by the Andes mountains and by coastal mountains. The average rainfall in the
Chilean region of Antofagasta is just 1 mm per year, and at one time no rain fell in
the entire desert for 400 years. Some weather stations in the Atacama have never received rain. Evidence suggests that the
Atacama may not have had any significant rainfall from 1570 to 1971.[1] It is so arid that mountains that reach as high as 6,885 metres (22,590 feet) are completely free
of glaciers and, in the southern part from 25°S to 27°S, may have been glacier-free throughout
the Quaternary — though permafrost extends down to an
altitude of 4,400 metres and is continuous above 5,600 metres. Studies by a group of British scientists have suggested that some
river beds have been dry for 120,000 years.
Some locations in the Atacama do receive a marine fog known locally as the Camanchaca,
providing sufficient moisture for hypolithic algae, lichens and
even some cacti. But in the region that is in the "fog shadow" of the high coastal crest-line,
which averages 3,000 m height for about 100 km south of Antofagasta, the soil has been compared to that of Mars. Due to its otherworldly appearance, the Atacama has been used as a location for filming Mars scenes, most
notably in the television series Space Odyssey: Voyage to the
Planets.
In 2003, a team of researchers published a report in Science magazine titled
"Mars-like Soils in the Atacama Desert, Chile, and the Dry Limit of Microbial Life" in which they duplicated the tests used by
the Viking 1 and Viking 2 Mars landers to detect life, and
were unable to detect any signs in Atacama Desert soil. The region may be unique on Earth in this regard and is being used by
NASA to test instruments for future Mars missions. Alonso de Ercilla characterized it in La
Araucana, published in 1569: "Towards Atacama, near the deserted coast, you see a land
without men, where there is not a bird, not a beast, nor a tree, nor any vegetation" (quoted Braudel 1984 p 388).
Human occupation
The Atacama is sparsely populated. In an oasis, in the middle of the desert, at about 2000
meters elevation, lies the village of San Pedro de Atacama. Its church was built by
the Spanish in 1577. In pre-hispanic times, before the Inca empire,
the super-arid interior was inhabited mainly by the Atacameño tribe. It is most notable for
the construction of fortified towns called pucara(s), one of which can be seen a few miles from San Pedro de Atacama.
During the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries when under the Spanish Empire towns grew
along the coast shipping ports for silver produced in Potosí and
other mines.
During the 19th century the desert came under control of Bolivia, Chile and Peru and soon became a conflictive zone due to
unclear borders and the discovery of nitrate there. After the War of the Pacific in which Chile annexed most of the desert, cities in the zone grew into big
international ports, and many Chilean workers migrated there.
The Escondida Mine and Chuquicamata are also located
within the Atacama Desert.
The Pan-American Highway runs through the Atacama in a north-south
trajectory.
Because of its high altitude, nearly non-existent cloud cover, and lack of light pollution and radio interference from the
very widely spaced cities, the desert is one of the best places in the world to conduct astronomical observations. The
European Southern Observatory operates two major observatories in the Atacama:
- The La Silla Observatory
- The Paranal Observatory, which includes the Very Large Telescope.
A new radio astronomy observatory, called ALMA, is being built in the Atacama by astronomers from Europe, Japan, and North America. Another
radio astronomy observatory, ACT, is being built on Cerro Toco in the
Atacama Desert.
Abandoned nitrate mining towns
The Atacama has rich deposits of copper and other minerals,
and the world's largest natural supply of sodium nitrate, which was mined on a large
scale until the early 1940s. The Atacama border dispute over these resources
between Chile and Bolivia began in the 1800s.
Now the desert is littered with approximately 170 abandoned nitrate (or "saltpeter") mining towns, almost all of which were
shut down decades after the invention of synthetic nitrate in Germany at the turn of the 20th
century.[citation needed] The towns include
Chacabuco, Humberstone, Santa
Laura, Pedro de Valdivia, Puelma, Maria Elena and Oficina Anita.
Legends
- Alicanto
- Yastay
- Atacama Giant
Notes
- ^ a b Wright,
John W. (ed.); Editors and reporters of The New York Times (2006). The New York Times Almanac, 2007, New York, New
York: Penguin Books, 456. ISBN 0-14-303820-6.
References
- Braudel, Fernand, The Perspective of the World, ISBN 0520081161, vol. III of
Civilization and Capitalism 1984 (originally published in French, 1979).
- Sagaris, Lake. Bone and dream : into the world's driest desert. 1st ed. --
Toronto : A.A. Knopf Canada, c2000. ISBN 0676972233
See also
- Atacama Crossing
- Atacama border dispute
- List of deserts by area
External links
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