You'd Be Surprised To
Find....
The Atacama desert is nestled along
the coast of Chile, South America - right next to the Pacific Ocean -
the biggest body of water in the world. Much of the desert extends
up into the Andes mountains and is very high in elevation. Unlike more
familiar deserts, like the Sahara desert in Africa and the Mojave in
California, the Atacama is actually a pretty cold place, with average
daily temperatures ranging between 0°C and 25°C. The annual rainfall (or
lack of it) defines a desert, but that doesn't mean that it never rains
in Atacama. Every so often a warming effect over the Pacific Ocean
around the equator changes the weather the world over and even places
like the driest desert in the world can become doused with drenching
storms. Even though Atacama gets almost no rainfall, there is water in
this arid place and you'll find it in the following places:
Salt
Lakes
During years of
heavy rainfall in the distant past, enough water accumulated in basins
found throughout the Andes to create lakes. Some of the lakes got their
water from melting glaciers at the end of the last ice age. But in some
lakes in the Andes mountains, such as Atacama, more water is lost
through evaporation than is replaced by rainfall so the lakes are drying
up. As the water evaporates, the mineral salts in the water become more
concentrated, creating very salty water.
Snow
I n the higher elevations when precipitation
comes to Atacama snow falls instead of rain. There are small patches of
unmelted snow in the mountain tops where in never gets warm enough to
melt the snow.
Underground
Anywhere you go in the world, regardless of how much
or little it rains, there is always water underground. After it rains,
some of the rainwater evaporates back into the air, but much of it
trickles down into the ground and stays there - even in the desert. How
much water and where depends on a number of things; soil composition,
air and soil surface temperature, amount and frequency of
rainfall/precipitation, and drainage. Since the Andes is a volcanically
active mountain range, the magma beneath the ground will heat the
groundwater in certain places causing geysers to erupt.
Fog and
Dew
M ost of the
precipitation that comes to the Atacama is in the form of fog that blows
in the from the Pacific. Fog is essentially very low clouds, consisting
of water vapor cooling and beginning to condense. If you've ever been in
fog you know that it can leave you a little moist. When the air
temperature reaches dew point the water vapor in the air condenses to
leave little droplets of water behind. The few things that are able to
survive in the Atacama live on the combined moisture from fog and
dew.
Many people have the view
that deserts are places forsaken by Mother Nature and that no living
thing would possibly want to set up camp in a place so dry. Although it
is tough to find anything living in the Atacama there are isolated
pockets and small patches of plants, which support life for animals and
insects. Some plant species have adapted well to this dry environment by
developing tap roots that run very deep into the ground gathering water
from below. There are flocks of flamingos that live in and around the
salt lakes feeding on red algae that grows in the waters. There are even
people living in the Atacama.
There is a town called Calama in the
desert which is complete with motels, restaurants and shops, but it is
definitely not the norm. For the most part, Atacama is a pretty lonely
place. Humans have lived in the Atacama for many thousands of years,
based on the cultural relics and artifacts that archeaologists have
found. The South American Indians who have set up housekeeping in the
desert over the millenia have left relics from their culture and even
themselves. Because the Atacama is so bone-dry the bodies of the buried
indians have dried perfectly preserved turning them into mummies. Some
of the oldest mummies found anywhere on earth have come from the Atacama
Desert and have been dated to be 9,000 years old!
One reason is that the high
atmospheric pressure in this region over the Andes can cause dry, cold
air from the upper altitudes to compress and come down to earth. This
dry air has almost no water vapor so it can be easily heated by the sun,
causing high ground temperatures with very low humidity.
Another reason that the Atacama
doesn't get enough rainfall is because of a phenomenon called rainshadow. The warm, moist tropical air that blows on the
tradewinds from the east, which douse the South American rainforest, get
hung-up on the east side of the Andes. The mountains are so high in
altitude that the air cools, condenses and rains (or snows) on the
mountains. As the air descends the other side of the mountain range it
warms, holding in its moisture preventing rain from falling on to the
ground below.
This is one of the reasons why the
Amazon basin and river are the largest anywhere in the world. The
mountains that cause the Amazon to be the
largest river from collecting all the rainfall are also responsible
for preventing the Atacama from ever receiving any rainfall. The driest
and one of the wettest places in the world are right next to each
other!
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