The
north of Chile is a land of contrasts, where the altiplano and
the Atacama Desert come together to offer strikingly beautiful
sights.
The Atacama Desert is said to be "the driest in the world."
In fact, rainfall has never been recorded in some areas. What
causes such extreme dryness?
The altiplano, or high plateau region, receives occasional tropical
rain in January and February. Here, it is the altitude rather
than the lack of water that challenges life in this area: only
the hardiest, most specialized flora and fauna can survive the
hardships of life at over 3500 meters (11,483 ft).
Vast and colorful, dotted with lakes, swamps, salt flats, and
geysers, crowned with volcanoes 6000 meters (nearly 20,000 ft)
high, the altiplano links Chile with the great cultures of the
central Andes.
Today,
the Chilean high plateau is home to the traditional Aymara Indians,
who wander among volcanoes and swampy meadows with their tame
llamas and alpacas. They gather periodically to honor their saints
in fantastical lime-bleached ceremonial villages. Large areas
of this remarkable region are protected by a system of spectacular
national parks, including Lauca National Park, declared a World
Biosphere Reserve by UNESCO.
Some of the rainfall is filtered through the mountains, emerging
in springs and streams to transform the landscape, creating swaths
of wild vegetation and crops, wildlife habitats and human settlements,
salt flats and salt mountains.
These
strips of water and life have been discovered and used by humans
for generations. San Pedro de Atacama and other oases on the Loa
and Salado rivers served as stops on the pre-Incan trade routes
that connected the altiplano with the Amazon and the coast. The
caravans crisscrossed the desert on pathways that are now marked
only by geoglyphs, the most impressive archaeological remains
in northern Chile.
From
north to south, the main tourist centers in northern Chile are
Arica, Iquique, Calama, San Pedro de Atacama, and Antofagasta.
Except for Calama and San Pedro de Atacama, they are all coastal
cities with excellent beaches unthreatened by clouds, much less
by rain.
Lodging,
transportation, and other services are on a par with those of
the capital. Each city provides access to a part of the desert,
the mountains, or the altiplano. Walks, ethno-tours, excursions
in all-terrain vehicles, mountain climbing, and archaeology are
some of the more common activities in this region.
Near
the southern part of this region, the cities of Copiapó
and La Serena are the doorway to the slender valleys that cut
across the Andes from east to west. They are known for their production
of the country's beloved pisco, or grape brandy, and for having
the clearest skies in the southern hemisphere, which attract professional
and amateur astronomers from all over the world.