Sunday, October 29, 2017

A Glimpse of Northern Argentina

North and west of Buenos Aires, Argentina becomes more and more tropical and then rises toward the Altiplano and the Andes. The rainfall drops to a few inches a year, which fall during the hot summer.
northwest Argentina
northwest Argentina
To the west, northern Chile sits on the Altiplano, over 10,000' above sea level, with the surrounding mountains even higher.
Altiplano, Chile
Looking across the Chilean Altiplano

I visited in October--spring in the Southern Hemisphere--on a Mountain Sobek tour led by Brian Weirum (link). We flew from Buenos Aires to Salta in Salta Province. The flight cruised the plains (pampas) of Argentina and then suddenly the land rose. I had thought of the Andes as The mountains of South America, but in fact a series of mountain ranges run north-south to the east of the Andes. The Nevado de Cachi range, on the west side of Salta Province, rises to 20,931' (6380 m) at their highest peak, Cumbre Liberator. The flight to Salta felt like approching Denver from the east: rolling plains abruptly became mountains, except that Denver is on the plains at the base of the mountains and Salta is in a valley beyond the first mountain range.

Salta is 1000' lower than Denver with a milder climate--almost no frosts or days in the 90s. It is also wetter with about 28" of rain a year, mostly in summer (December to March).

Much of Salta Province is drier than the city of Salta. Cafayate gets 17", almost all in the summer (link), Molinos only 6", again in summer (link)

The road south to Cafayate had glorious rock formations.

road to Cafayate, Argentina

southern Salta Province, Argentina
.
Through irrigation--mountain runoff runs through the region toward the Atlantic--the area is a major grape-growing region, producing Malbec and Torrentes wines. Argentines eat well and the local wines were delicious.

vineyard, Salta Province, Argentina

Like New Mexico and Arizona, when you look to unwatered vegetation, it is another story. The native plants were tough and spiny. Since it was October, most native plants were dormant, waiting for the summer rains.

hillside, Salta Province, Argentina

One very visible plant was the cardón, the columnar cactus Echinopsis atacamensis. It looks similar to saguaro of the US southwest (Carnegiea gigantea) and the elephant cactus (also called cardón, Pachycereus pringlei) in Mexico. Here cardón was growing at over 10,000' in elevation. Even at 10,000', in northwestern Argentina, frosts are rare.

cardon, Echinopsis atacamensis
 cardón
Looping north again past the city of Salta, we entered Jujuy Province, Argentina's far northwest. There we visited Purmamarca, a World Heritage site--for both landscape and culture--in Humahuaca Canyon. It was a pretty place with colored rock formations and a marketplace full of equally colorful Andean products.

Purmamarca, Argentina
Purmamarca, Argentina
The following day we drove up the mountains of the western edge of Argentina to Jama Pass (at 13,780') and across the border between Argentina and Chile. The border runs along the divide, with its highest point on the road at 15,420'.  Clouds from the Atlantic supplement the rainfall on the east-facing mountains so we drove through fog and drizzle all the long steep climb up the mountainside

the road to Jama Pass

and emerged into sunlight just about at the top of the road. We crossed through a customs station where the two countries had adjacent booths in a single building.
close to the Argentina-Chile Border, Argentina Route 52
Close to the Argentina-Chile Border, Argentina Route 52
Although we had climbed 5000' to that high pass out of Argentina, we didn't go down again into Chile. This was the Altiplano, a high dry plain that runs across northern Chile at an average elevation of 12, 300 feet above sea level.
Altiplano in Chile
Altiplano near Jama Pass; the flat Altiplano is about 12000' in elevation,
the distant mountains are to the south
Next week, northern Chile...

Comments and corrections welcome

Kathy Keeler, A Wandering Botanist
You might also like these posts

Northeastern Argentina-- Corrientes Province link 
Corrientes, Argentina

Southern Argentina - Tierra del Fuego link

Tierra del Fuego, Argentina

Baja California - link

Baja California, Mexico





1 comment:

  1. Thanks, Kathy!! I haven't even started in on my photos yet - it is fun to re-live our trip! The other Cathy

    ReplyDelete