Difference between revisions of "Atacama Desert" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Atacama1.jpg|300px|right|thumb|Atacama Desert]]
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[[Image:Atacama1.jpg|350px|right|thumb|Atacama Desert]]
  
 
The '''Atacama Desert''' of Chile covers the northern third of the country stretching 1,000km (600 miles) and straddles the southern border of Peru. Bound on the west by barren hills and mountains on the Pacific coast it extends east into the Andes mountains. At an average elevation of about 4 kilometers (13,000 feet) it is not only the highest desert in the world but also the driest. In some parts rainfall has never been recorded. Vegetation is almost non-existent with 0.6mm to 2.1mm of rain falling around the region. Average daily temperatures range between 0°C-25°C making the Atacama relatively cool compared with the Sahara or the Great Sandy desert's.  
 
The '''Atacama Desert''' of Chile covers the northern third of the country stretching 1,000km (600 miles) and straddles the southern border of Peru. Bound on the west by barren hills and mountains on the Pacific coast it extends east into the Andes mountains. At an average elevation of about 4 kilometers (13,000 feet) it is not only the highest desert in the world but also the driest. In some parts rainfall has never been recorded. Vegetation is almost non-existent with 0.6mm to 2.1mm of rain falling around the region. Average daily temperatures range between 0°C-25°C making the Atacama relatively cool compared with the Sahara or the Great Sandy desert's.  
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Despite extremes and desolation there is stunning beauty. With the Andes as a backdrop the desert contains five snow topped volcanoes which are the highest volcanoes in the world and the highest elevations in South America.
 
Despite extremes and desolation there is stunning beauty. With the Andes as a backdrop the desert contains five snow topped volcanoes which are the highest volcanoes in the world and the highest elevations in South America.
 
== Geography ==
 
== Geography ==
[[Image:Valle de la luna san pedro chile.jpg|thumb|300px|Scene from Valle de la Luna (Moon Valley) near San Pedro de Atacama.]]
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[[Image:Valle de la luna san pedro chile.jpg|thumb|350px|Scene from Valle de la Luna (Moon Valley) near San Pedro de Atacama.]]
  
 
Sparsely populated and virtually rainless, the Atacama Desert forms a narrow strip on the coast of [[Chile]], between 600 — 700 miles long. The average with, from the [[Pacific Ocean]] on the east to the [[Andes Mountains]] on the west, is less than 60 miles (100 km). The north end of the desert lies at border of Chile, while the south stretches to the bend of the Loa River and the mountains separating the Salado-Copiapó drainage basins.
 
Sparsely populated and virtually rainless, the Atacama Desert forms a narrow strip on the coast of [[Chile]], between 600 — 700 miles long. The average with, from the [[Pacific Ocean]] on the east to the [[Andes Mountains]] on the west, is less than 60 miles (100 km). The north end of the desert lies at border of Chile, while the south stretches to the bend of the Loa River and the mountains separating the Salado-Copiapó drainage basins.
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Astrobiologists are studying the Atacama to discover clues which may unlock secrets of life on other planets and the possibility of survival there. They are also studying the growth of plants in extreme places in order to develop plants that could be grown off—world or on Mars.
 
Astrobiologists are studying the Atacama to discover clues which may unlock secrets of life on other planets and the possibility of survival there. They are also studying the growth of plants in extreme places in order to develop plants that could be grown off—world or on Mars.
  
== Biodiversity ==
+
=== Biodiversity ===
 
The [[plant]] and [[animal]] life in the Atacama survive in perhaps the earth's most demanding conditions. There is a high incidence of endemic flora. Local populations have relied on some of the species for medicinal purposes for generations.  
 
The [[plant]] and [[animal]] life in the Atacama survive in perhaps the earth's most demanding conditions. There is a high incidence of endemic flora. Local populations have relied on some of the species for medicinal purposes for generations.  
  
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== Resources ==
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=== Resources ===
The area proved to be one of the chief sources of Chile's wealth until World War I. Nitrate deposits in the central depression and in several basins of the coastal range were systematically mined after the mid-19th century. Ports were built at Iquique, Caldera, Antofagasta, Taltal, Tocopilla, Mejillones, and, farther north, Pisagua, and railroads penetrated the mountain barriers to the interior. Prior to World War I, Chile had a world monopoly on nitrate; in some years 3,000,000 tons were extracted, and the taxes on its export amounted to half the government's revenues. The development of synthetic methods of fixing nitrogen have since reduced the market to a regional one. Some sulfur is still mined in the high Cordillera. The region's chief source of revenue, however, is copper mining at Chuquicamata in the Calama basin.
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[[Image:Chile-Tatio-Geyser.jpg|thumb|left|350px| Geyser of Tatio in Atacama desert, Chile]]
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The Atacama was one of [[Chile]]'s chief sources of wealth until [[World War I]]. Prior to that time, that nation had a monopoly on the [[nitrate]] trade worldwide. Three million tons were extracted in some years. The taxes alone on these exports amounted to 50 percent of the government's revenues. Since that time, [[sulfur]] is mined, as well as [[copper]], which is the region's chief source of revenue and provides over 30 percent of the world's copper supply. The Atacama border dispute between [[Chile]] and [[Bolivia]] began in the 1800s over these resources.
  
 +
 +
The coastal cities of Iquique, Caldera, Antofagasta, Taltal, Tocopilla, Mejillones, and, Pisagua have ports, while railroads cut through the mountain barriers to the interior.
  
Some farming is done in the desert's river oases, but this supports only a few thousand traditional cultivators. Lemons are grown at Pica, and a variety of products are cultivated on the shores of the salt marshes at San Pedro de Atacama. At Calama, near Chuquicamata, water from the Loa River irrigates potato and alfalfa fields.
+
The environment offers little support to agriculture, but some farming is done near the river oases. [[Lemon]]s are grown on the shores of the salt marshes, while [[potato]]s and [[alfalfa]] are grown near the Loa River.
  
==Human habitation==
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==== Abandoned mines ====
[[Image:Chile-Atacama.jpg|thumb|left|Atacama road.|300px]]
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Currently, the Atacama 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. Some of these abandoned towns include Chacabuco, Humberstone, Santa Laura, Pedro de Valdivia, Puelma, Maria Elena and Oficina Anita. Chacabuco is a special case since it was later converted into a concentration camp during [[Pinochet]]'s regime. To this day it is surrounded by 98 lost landmines and is guarded by one man who lives there alone.
For humans to survive in and around the desert has been very challenging. It is not surprising then to discover in fact the Atacama is home to almost a million people. People are found mostly in coastal cities, fishing villages, oasis communities and scattered mining camps. In the altiplano, the descendants of the region's pre-Columbian natives (mostly Aymara and Atacama Indians) herd llamas and alpacas and grow crops with water from snowmelt streams. <ref> Vesilind, Priit J.  National Geographic Magazine. August 2003. http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0308/feature3/ Retrieved May 2, 2007 </ref>
 
  
Archaeological evidence indicates that the San Pedro area was the center of a [[Paleolithic]] civilization that built rock fortresses on the steep mountains encircling the valley.  
+
=== Concerns ===
 +
Of [[Archaeology|archaeological]] importance are the lomas formations. These beautiful and rare sites draw both tourists as well as scientists wishing to study the area. Environmentalists are concerned that the public has not been educated sufficiently enough to understand the delicate balance that is needed in this environment.
  
The original inhabitants of the region were the Atacameños, an extinct Indian culture different from that of the Aymaras to the north and the Diaguitas to the south. <ref> Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007. [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9010024 Atacama Desert], ''Encyclopædia Britannica Online''. Retrieved April 27, 2007</ref>
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Roads and mining operations have caused some damage. Overgrazing of domestic livestock has occured in the north, as has commercial gathering of rare plants, including cacti and bulbs. The area of Quebrada El León has been overused, but with an opportunity for recuperation, could become a valuable nature reserve, providing for further study and pleasure.   
  
 +
The desert has three protected areas;
 +
*'''Pan de Azúcar National Park''' was established in 1986 and covers 438 km². It has been recommended that this area be expanded to allow for further protection.
 +
*'''Pampa del Tamarugal National Reserve''' is one of the key areas for the conservation of the threatened [[tamarugo conebill]].
 +
*'''La Chimba National Reserve''' was most recently established.
  
The Escondida Mine and Chuquicamata are also located within the Atacama.
+
Most threats to this ecoregion are closely associated increased urbanization, pollution, road construction, livestock grazing, fuelwood gathering, commercial plant collecting, and erosion.
  
The Pan-American Highway runs through the Atacama in a north-south trajectory.
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== History ==
 +
[[Image:Chile-Atacama.jpg|right|350px|thumb| Atacama road.]]
  
The [[European Southern Observatory]] operates two major [[observatory|observatories]] in the Atacama Desert:
+
=== Human habitation ===
 +
[[Archaeology|Archaeological]] evidence indicates that the San Pedro area was the center of a [[Paleolithic]] [[civilization]] that built rock fortresses on the steep mountains encircling the valley. The Atacameños, an extinct Native culture different from that of the Aymaras to the north and the Diaguitas to the south were the original inhabitants of the Atacama.
  
* The [[La Silla Observatory]]
+
The Atacama is sparsely populated today, with less than one million inhabitants in its 40,600 square miles (105,200 square kilometers). The population are centered in the coastal cities, fishing villages, oasis communities and scattered mining camps. In the altiplano, the descendants of the region's pre-Columbian natives (mostly Aymara and Atacama Indians) herd [[llama]]s and [[alpaca]]s and grow crops with water from snowmelt streams.
* Located 130 km from Antofagasta at an altitude of 2635.43m and 12 km from the coast is the Paranal Observatory, which includes the Very Large Telescope.
 
  
A new [[radio astronomy]] observatory, called [[ALMA]], is being built in the Atacama Desert by astronomers from Europe, Japan, and North America.
+
=== International Disputes ===
 +
Border disputes filled much of the 19th century, between the nations of [[Chile]], [[Bolivia]], and [[Peru]]. This was due to the abundance of mineral resources, particularly sodium nitrate. The mining industry was controlled by [[Chile]] and [[Great Britain]], though the area itself was owned by [[Bolivia]] and [[Peru]].
  
Another radio astronomy observatory, [[Atacama Cosmology Telescope|ACT]], is being built on Cerro Toco in the Atacama Desert.
+
The disputes eventually erupted into the War of the Pacific, which raged from 1879 to 1883. The Treaty of Ancón of 1883 gave Chile permanent ownership of areas previously controlled by Peru and Bolivia. Bolivia lost its entire [[Pacific Ocean|Pacific]] coastline, becoming a landlocked nation.
 
 
== Great source of minerals ==
 
[[Image:Chile-Tatio-Geyser.jpg|thumb|right|300px| Geyser of Tatio in Atacama desert, Chile]]
 
 
 
The Atacama Desert holds major reserves of copper, gold, silver and industrial metals, it is the heart of Chile's mining industry. Chile's copper mines provide over 30% of the world's mine production of recoverable copper. It also contains the world's largest natural supply of [[sodium nitrate]], which was mined on a large scale until the early 1940s.  The Atacama border dispute between [[Chile]] and [[Bolivia]] began in the 1800s over these resources.
 
 
 
The Chuquicamata mine is the largest open-pit copper mine in the world, located 15 km north of the city of Calama in the region of Antofagasta. The mine is elliptical in form, with a surface of almost 8,000,000 m2, and it is 900 m deep. Copper from Chuquicamata is transported by rail southwest to Antofagasta. Approximately 30,000 people work in the remote region around the mine.
 
 
 
Chuquicamata is an opencast copper mine, where a relatively poor copper ore is mined in impressive huge amounts. Modern mining and smelting technology allows the usage of such depostits at unrivaled low costs. The ore contains only between 1.13% and 1.18% metals, most of it copper, but also molybdenum and selenium in a very low proportion. <ref>http://www.showcaves.com/english/misc/mines/Chuquicamata.html. Retrieved April 27, 2007</ref>
 
 
 
Currently, the Atacama 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.  Some of these abandoned towns include [[Chacabuco]], Humberstone, Santa Laura, Pedro de Valdivia, Puelma, Maria Elena and Oficina Anita. Chacabuco is a special case since it was later converted into a concentration camp during [[Pinochet]]'s regime. To this day it is surrounded by 98 lost landmines and is guarded by one man who lives there alone.
 
 
 
The '''Atacama border dispute''' was a border dispute between [[Chile]] and [[Bolivia]] in the 1800s that ended in Chilean annexation of all of the Bolivian Coast and the southern tip of Bolivia's ally [[Peru]], during the [[War of the Pacific]] (1879-1883). Later Peru and [[Argentina]] became involved in the dispute. Some still consider the dispute ongoing as Bolivia continues to claim a sovereign access to the [[Pacific Ocean]].
 
  
 
==Notes ==
 
==Notes ==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}
 +
 
==Sources and Further Reading==
 
==Sources and Further Reading==
 
* Braudel, Fernand, ''The perspective of the world'', New York, Harper & Row, 1984, ISBN 0060153172
 
* Braudel, Fernand, ''The perspective of the world'', New York, Harper & Row, 1984, ISBN 0060153172
Line 81: Line 78:
 
* Lustig, L. K. 1970. "Appraisal of research on geomorphology and surface hydrology of desert environments".  ''Deserts of the world: An appraisal of research into their physical and biological environments''. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.  
 
* Lustig, L. K. 1970. "Appraisal of research on geomorphology and surface hydrology of desert environments".  ''Deserts of the world: An appraisal of research into their physical and biological environments''. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.  
 
* Dillon, M.O., and A.E. Hoffmann-J. 1997. "Lomas Formations of the Atacama Desert Northern Chile". ''Centres of Plant Diversity: A guide and Strategy for their Conservation''. World Wildlife Fund. IUCN, Oxford, U.K.
 
* Dillon, M.O., and A.E. Hoffmann-J. 1997. "Lomas Formations of the Atacama Desert Northern Chile". ''Centres of Plant Diversity: A guide and Strategy for their Conservation''. World Wildlife Fund. IUCN, Oxford, U.K.
 +
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
http://www.ls.eso.org/index.html
+
* [http://www.ls.eso.org/index.html
http://www.eso.org/paranal/site/paranal.html
+
* [http://www.eso.org/paranal/site/paranal.html
 
*  Vesilind, Priit J., [http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0308/feature3/ Parts of Chile's Atacama Desert haven't seen a drop of rain since recordkeeping began. Somehow, more than a million people squeeze life from this parched land], ''National Geographic'', Accessed March 19, 2007
 
*  Vesilind, Priit J., [http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0308/feature3/ Parts of Chile's Atacama Desert haven't seen a drop of rain since recordkeeping began. Somehow, more than a million people squeeze life from this parched land], ''National Geographic'', Accessed March 19, 2007
 
* [http://science.slashdot.org/science/05/03/19/1943236.shtml?tid=216&tid=191&tid=14 Autonomous Robot Finds Life in Atacama Desert], ''Slash Dot'', Accessed March 19, 2007
 
* [http://science.slashdot.org/science/05/03/19/1943236.shtml?tid=216&tid=191&tid=14 Autonomous Robot Finds Life in Atacama Desert], ''Slash Dot'', Accessed March 19, 2007

Revision as of 14:57, 25 June 2007


Atacama Desert

The Atacama Desert of Chile covers the northern third of the country stretching 1,000km (600 miles) and straddles the southern border of Peru. Bound on the west by barren hills and mountains on the Pacific coast it extends east into the Andes mountains. At an average elevation of about 4 kilometers (13,000 feet) it is not only the highest desert in the world but also the driest. In some parts rainfall has never been recorded. Vegetation is almost non-existent with 0.6mm to 2.1mm of rain falling around the region. Average daily temperatures range between 0°C-25°C making the Atacama relatively cool compared with the Sahara or the Great Sandy desert's.

Despite extremes and desolation there is stunning beauty. With the Andes as a backdrop the desert contains five snow topped volcanoes which are the highest volcanoes in the world and the highest elevations in South America.

Geography

Scene from Valle de la Luna (Moon Valley) near San Pedro de Atacama.

Sparsely populated and virtually rainless, the Atacama Desert forms a narrow strip on the coast of Chile, between 600 — 700 miles long. The average with, from the Pacific Ocean on the east to the Andes Mountains on the west, is less than 60 miles (100 km). The north end of the desert lies at border of Chile, while the south stretches to the bend of the Loa River and the mountains separating the Salado-Copiapó drainage basins.

The average rainfall in the desert ranges from 0.6 mm (in Arica) to 2.1 (in Iquique). However, there are some areas which have never recorded rainfall. Dr. Tibor Dunai who spoke before the American Geophysical Union told the BBC in a news article: "We found loose sediment surfaces that would be washed away by any desert rainfall and these are older than 20 million years," he said. This is much older than other hyper-arid regions, such as the Dry Valleys of Antarctica (10-11 million years) and the Namib Desert in Africa (5 million years). "The origin of the aridity in the Atacama dates back to the opening of ocean pathways - the opening between South America and Antarctica, and between Australia and the Antarctic. [1]

What is known as fog-zone plant communities have developed due to the entrapment of clouds by mountains or steep coastal slopes. These communities lie near the coast and in lower portions of numerous gorges between sea level and 1,100 m. Short-lived perennial and woody scrub vegetation grow here.

Other areas receive marine fog, providing sufficient moisture for hypolithic algae, lichens and even some cacti. In these areas, even decomposition does not occur. Dead vegetation may be thousands of years old. A recent innovation has made it possible to catch water from the air. With the use of mesh nets, water is trapped and trickled off via piping into storage tanks.

In the southern desert, fog-zone vegetation supports approximately 230 species of vascular plants. Included are the dominant species of Euphorbia lactiflua and Eulychnia iquiquensis. Other shrubby species in the zone include Echinopsis coquimbana, Oxalis gigantea, Lycium stenophyllum, Proustia cuneifolia, Croton chilensis, Balbisia penduncularis and Tillandsia geissei. Bromeliads are also present along the coastal flats in this southern part, and include Deuterocohni chrysantha and Puya boliviensis.

Astrobiologists are studying the Atacama to discover clues which may unlock secrets of life on other planets and the possibility of survival there. They are also studying the growth of plants in extreme places in order to develop plants that could be grown off—world or on Mars.

Biodiversity

The plant and animal life in the Atacama survive in perhaps the earth's most demanding conditions. There is a high incidence of endemic flora. Local populations have relied on some of the species for medicinal purposes for generations.

Approximately 550 species if vascular plants have been discovered in the Atacama, the most diverse being the families of Asteraceae, Nolanaceae, Cataceae, Boraginaceae, and Apiaceae. Three cacti are endemic to the northern part of the Atacama Desert; they are Eulychnia iquiquensis, Neoporteria sensu and Copiapoa. There are also numerous endemic shrubs.

Animal life is very rare in this desert, though there are a few insects and lizards to be found. Mice and fox are there in small number.

The fog-zone plant communities, or lomas, provide a friendlier environment. Birds such as the Peruvian song-sparrow, Pacific blue-black grassquit and hummingbirds live there, for at least a portion of the year. Six restricted species can be found in the north region: thick-billed miner, white-throated earthcreeper, cactus canastero, Chilean woodstar, slender-billed finch and the tamarugo conebill, the latter three of which are considered threatened species.


Resources

File:Chile-Tatio-Geyser.jpg
Geyser of Tatio in Atacama desert, Chile

The Atacama was one of Chile's chief sources of wealth until World War I. Prior to that time, that nation had a monopoly on the nitrate trade worldwide. Three million tons were extracted in some years. The taxes alone on these exports amounted to 50 percent of the government's revenues. Since that time, sulfur is mined, as well as copper, which is the region's chief source of revenue and provides over 30 percent of the world's copper supply. The Atacama border dispute between Chile and Bolivia began in the 1800s over these resources.


The coastal cities of Iquique, Caldera, Antofagasta, Taltal, Tocopilla, Mejillones, and, Pisagua have ports, while railroads cut through the mountain barriers to the interior.

The environment offers little support to agriculture, but some farming is done near the river oases. Lemons are grown on the shores of the salt marshes, while potatos and alfalfa are grown near the Loa River.

Abandoned mines

Currently, the Atacama 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. Some of these abandoned towns include Chacabuco, Humberstone, Santa Laura, Pedro de Valdivia, Puelma, Maria Elena and Oficina Anita. Chacabuco is a special case since it was later converted into a concentration camp during Pinochet's regime. To this day it is surrounded by 98 lost landmines and is guarded by one man who lives there alone.

Concerns

Of archaeological importance are the lomas formations. These beautiful and rare sites draw both tourists as well as scientists wishing to study the area. Environmentalists are concerned that the public has not been educated sufficiently enough to understand the delicate balance that is needed in this environment.

Roads and mining operations have caused some damage. Overgrazing of domestic livestock has occured in the north, as has commercial gathering of rare plants, including cacti and bulbs. The area of Quebrada El León has been overused, but with an opportunity for recuperation, could become a valuable nature reserve, providing for further study and pleasure.

The desert has three protected areas;

  • Pan de Azúcar National Park was established in 1986 and covers 438 km². It has been recommended that this area be expanded to allow for further protection.
  • Pampa del Tamarugal National Reserve is one of the key areas for the conservation of the threatened tamarugo conebill.
  • La Chimba National Reserve was most recently established.

Most threats to this ecoregion are closely associated increased urbanization, pollution, road construction, livestock grazing, fuelwood gathering, commercial plant collecting, and erosion.

History

Atacama road.

Human habitation

Archaeological evidence indicates that the San Pedro area was the center of a Paleolithic civilization that built rock fortresses on the steep mountains encircling the valley. The Atacameños, an extinct Native culture different from that of the Aymaras to the north and the Diaguitas to the south were the original inhabitants of the Atacama.

The Atacama is sparsely populated today, with less than one million inhabitants in its 40,600 square miles (105,200 square kilometers). The population are centered in the coastal cities, fishing villages, oasis communities and scattered mining camps. In the altiplano, the descendants of the region's pre-Columbian natives (mostly Aymara and Atacama Indians) herd llamas and alpacas and grow crops with water from snowmelt streams.

International Disputes

Border disputes filled much of the 19th century, between the nations of Chile, Bolivia, and Peru. This was due to the abundance of mineral resources, particularly sodium nitrate. The mining industry was controlled by Chile and Great Britain, though the area itself was owned by Bolivia and Peru.

The disputes eventually erupted into the War of the Pacific, which raged from 1879 to 1883. The Treaty of Ancón of 1883 gave Chile permanent ownership of areas previously controlled by Peru and Bolivia. Bolivia lost its entire Pacific coastline, becoming a landlocked nation.

Notes

  1. Amos, Jonathan. December 8, 2005. Chile desert's super-dry history, BBC News. Retrieved April 29, 2007

Sources and Further Reading

  • Braudel, Fernand, The perspective of the world, New York, Harper & Row, 1984, ISBN 0060153172
  • Sagaris, Lake, Bone and dream : into the world's driest desert, Toronto, A.A. Knopf Canada, 2000, ISBN 0676972233
  • Aarons, John and Claudio Vita-Finzi, , 1960. The useless land; a winter in the Atacama Desert, London, R. Hale, OCLC 2649656
  • Roig, V. 1999. Atacama desert. Encyclopedia of deserts. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman (Oklahoma).
  • Lustig, L. K. 1970. "Appraisal of research on geomorphology and surface hydrology of desert environments". Deserts of the world: An appraisal of research into their physical and biological environments. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.
  • Dillon, M.O., and A.E. Hoffmann-J. 1997. "Lomas Formations of the Atacama Desert Northern Chile". Centres of Plant Diversity: A guide and Strategy for their Conservation. World Wildlife Fund. IUCN, Oxford, U.K.


External links



Deserts
Ad-Dahna | Alvord | Arabian | Aral Karakum | Atacama | Baja California | Barsuki | Betpak-Dala | Chalbi | Chihuahuan | Dasht-e Kavir | Dasht-e Lut | Dasht-e Margoh | Dasht-e Naomid | Gibson | Gobi | Great Basin | Great Sandy Desert | Great Victoria Desert | Kalahari | Karakum | Kyzylkum | Little Sandy Desert | Mojave | Namib | Nefud | Negev | Nubian | Ordos | Owyhee | Qaidam | Registan | Rub' al Khali | Ryn-Peski | Sahara | Saryesik-Atyrau | Sechura | Simpson | Sonoran | Strzelecki | Syrian | Taklamakan | Tanami | Thar | Tihamah | Ustyurt

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