Tuesday, April 19, 2011

The Incredible Bolivia, South America

'The Incredible Bolivia, South America

death road

'The Incredible Bolivia, South America

Titicacasee

'The Incredible Bolivia, South America

Titicacasee - boat

'The Incredible Bolivia, South America

Potosi, Casa de la Moneda

'The Incredible Bolivia, South America

Potosi_Indian Art

'The Incredible Bolivia, South America

Moon Valley

'The Incredible Bolivia, South America

The Tree Made of Stone - Desert of Uyunir

'The Incredible Bolivia, South America
'The Incredible Bolivia, South America

Firebirds

'The Incredible Bolivia, South America

Man and the Llamas
'The Incredible Bolivia, South America
The Incredible Bolivia, South America
The cloud-scraping plateau of the Andes is an otherworldly realm where flamingos lift off from a lagoon warmed by hot springs and colored carnelian by algae.
The Incredible Bolivia, South America
Moonlight bathes Incahuasi Island, an outcropping of cacti and fossilized algae in the Uyuni salt flat.
A great lake covered this area 16,000 years ago. When it dried up, it left a 4,000-square-mile basin of salt, the world's largest such deposit.
The Incredible Bolivia, South America
To find new grazing, vicuñas dash across a corner of the Uyuni salt flat.
Just three feet tall, these animals produce wool so soft it was reserved for Inca royalty.
Hunted almost to extinction, they're now protected and making a comeback.
The Incredible Bolivia, South America
Vehicles seem to float on a shimmering salt flat flooded by summer rains.
The Incredible Bolivia, South America
Winter's relentless sun vaporizes snow to create spiky forms called nieves penitentes near the top of Pomerape Volcano,
at 20,000 feet. Snow falls lightly at such extreme altitudes in the cold, dry climate along the Bolivia-Chile border.
The Incredible Bolivia, South America
Piles of salt, scraped by pickax from the deposit at Uyuni, await transport by truck to a nearby processing plant.
How much salt does this vast basin hold? Estimates range upward from ten billion tons—just one example of Bolivia's abundant mineral wealth,
which includes tin, silver, zinc, and natural gas.
The Incredible Bolivia, South America
Rare puna flamingos make Laguna Colorada their main nesting ground.
Also known as James's flamingos, the birds were thought extinct before a 1957 expedition discovered this colony, which now includes about 15,000 breeding pairs.
During winter, when the air temperature here at 14,000 feet above sea level sometimes plunges to minus 20 degrees Fahrenheit,
birds flock to the openings of the hot springs that keep Laguna Colorada warm.
The Incredible Bolivia, South America
On the Altiplano, wind erodes rock into a modernist shape perched on a narrow base.
The Incredible Bolivia, South America
The shadow of Sajama—at 21,463 feet, Bolivia's highest peak—juts over the rugged Chilean coast.
Bolivia lost access to the sea in the late 19th-century War of the Pacific, which embittered relations between the two countries.
The Incredible Bolivia, South America
Domesticated llamas spread across a spring-fed pasture at the edge of the Uyuni salt flat.
Such creatures have provided communities in the Altiplano with food, wool, and sturdy backs to bear burdens since before the time of the Inca.

No comments:

Post a Comment