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Atacama Desert, Chile

Atacama Desert, ChileLandscape of the Atacama Desert at San Pedro de Atacama, Chile
Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:San_Pedro_de_Atacama_%28desert%29.jpg
Author: Entropy1963
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Atacama Desert is the driest desert in the world. It covers an area of 105,000 sq km (40,541 sq mi) on the leeward side of the Chilean Coast Range, in northern Chile. The desert is composed on salt basins and felsic lava flows. Some places of the Atacama Desert do not get any moisture at all, as it is blocked on both sides, by the Andes mountains and by the Chilean Coast Range. The biggest city in the area, Antofagasta, receives just 1 mm (0.04 in) of rail per year. There are places in the Atacama Desert never to have recorded receiving any rain. As a result of this dryness, some of its mountains even to a height of 6,885 m (22,589 ft) are free of glaciers (even though there is permafrost extending down to the altitude of 4,400 m).

Lake, Atacama DesertA lake on the Atacama Desert, a rare and unusual sight
Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atacama_Desert_Water.jpg
Author: ESO
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Despite the harsh climate, the Atacama Desert is not completely uninhabited. Interestingly, the desert has oases and valleys that have supported a sparse population for thousands of years, including some of the most advanced pre-Hispanic civilizations in Chile.

There are a few cities within the Atacama Desert area, among them Antofagasta, Calama, Iquique and La Serena. These came into being under the Spanish Empire, when the area is found to be rich in minerals, particularly sodium nitrate and silver, and mines were established to extract them. The area was originally controlled by Bolivia, but was annexed by Chile following the war in 1879-1883 (War of the Pacific).

Bucket train, Atacama DesertBucket train, Atacama Desert
Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:FCAB_EMD_GR12_and_two_Clyde_GL26C-2_crossing_Salar_de_Ascotan,_Chile.jpg
Author: Kabelleger/David Gubler
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Atacama Dry LakeAtacama Dry Lake, with Licancabur volcano in the distance
Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Salar_de_Atacama.jpg
Author: Francesco Mocellin
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Today the Atacama Desert is littered with some 170 abandoned mines, since the invention of synthetic nitrate brought a collapse in prices.

World Heritage Sites in the Atacama Desert

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Dear visitor, thank you so much for reading this page. My name is Timothy Tye and my hobby is to find out about places, write about them and share the information with you on this website. I have been writing this site since 5 January 2003. Originally (from 2003 until 2009, the site was called AsiaExplorers. I changed the name to Penang Travel Tips in 2009, even though I describe more than just Penang but everywhere I go (I often need to tell people that "Penang Travel Tips" is not just information about Penang, but information written in Penang), especially places in Malaysia and Singapore, and in all the years since 2003, I have described over 20,000 places.

While I try my best to provide you information as accurate as I can get it to be, I do apologize for any errors and for outdated information which I am unaware. Nevertheless, I hope that what I have described here will be useful to you.

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