Laguna Miscanti is a brackish waterlake located in the altiplano of the Antofagasta Region in northern Chile. Cerro Miñiques volcano and Cerro Miscanti tower over this lake. This 13.5 square kilometres (5.2 sq mi) large heart-shaped lake has a deep blue colour and developed in a basin formed by a fault. South of Miscanti lies Laguna Miñiques, another lake which is separated from Miscanti by a lava flow that was emplaced there during the Pleistocene.
The lake is part of one of the seven sectors of Los Flamencos National Reserve. A number of birds and mammals live at the lake, which is a major tourist destination.
Geography
Laguna Miscanti lies in the Central Andes[2] of Chile,[3] east-southeast of the Salar de Atacama. Administratively, it is part of the Antofagasta Region.[4] The closest town is Socaire, 20 kilometres (12 mi) away from the lake.[5] A road departing from the Paso Sico international road goes to Miscanti,[6] which is accessible by an unpaved road and numerous footpaths.[7] The inhabitants of Socaire used the area for grazing, and it bears spiritual and religious importance for them.[8] In 2002, there were 5,000 tourists at Miscanti and the nearby lake Miñiques,[9] and in 2015, one in three tourists who went to the Los Flamencos National Reserve visited Miscanti and Laguna Miñiques.[10] An archeological site called "Miscanti-1" is found on the southeastern lake shore.[11]
Hydrography and geology
Laguna Miscanti is a maximally 10 metres (33 ft) deep lake with[12] clear[13]brackish water which covers a surface area of 13.5 square kilometres (5.2 sq mi);[12] the lake has the shape of an arrowhead with a peninsula jutting from the northern shore.[3] A lava flow separates the otherwise flat lake floor into two basins.[14] In the Atacama Altiplano, Laguna Miscanti is among the biggest waterbodies.[15] The mountains Cerro Miscanti (5,622 metres (18,445 ft)) and Cerro Miñiques (5,910 metres (19,390 ft)) lie northeast and south of the lake, respectively.[16]
1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi) south of[17] the lake is another waterbody, Laguna Miñiques.[18] In the past, the two lakes were connected, producing a large waterbody which has left beach terraces in the landscape[12] and whose water levels were about 20 metres (66 ft) higher than today.[19] The separation of the lakes probably occurred during the Pleistocene, when a lava flow erupted from Cerro Miñiques split the lake basin in two.[20][21] A number of creeks enter into Laguna Miscanti from the north, east and south (Quebrada de Chaquisoqui[1]), and there are two springs on its northern shores.[3]
The catchment of the lake consists mainly of volcanic and sedimentary rocks ranging from Miocene to Holocene age and covers a surface area of 320 square kilometres (120 sq mi),[12] with Quaternary volcanoes that reach elevations of 5,000–6,000 metres (16,000–20,000 ft).[5] The Cordon de Puntas Negras is the principal source of water.[19] Water reaches Laguna Miscanti principally as groundwater,[13] which is directed there by the fault; this may explain why Laguna Miscanti is a permanent lake rather than a playa.[20]
The lake has no surface outflow. Presently, water seeps to Miñiques through a lava flow[12] along the path of the Quebrada Nacimiento fault;[19] during former lake highstands a combined lake overflowed into the Pampa Varela basin[12] south-southwest of Miñiques.[16] Most water, however, leaves Laguna Miscanti through evaporation.[22] The town of Peine draws its water supply from the Miscanti basin.[28]
Climate
Presently, the regional climate is arid,[18] with average precipitation amounting to 200–250 mm/a (7.9–9.8 in/year), and cold, with average annual temperatures of 2 °C (36 °F). During winter, ice develops on the lake surface.[12] The lake area is usually a little warmer than the surrounding region.[29] The region lies between areas dominated by summer precipitation in the northeast and areas dominated by winter precipitation in the southwest.[18]
In the late Pleistocene and early Holocene the climate was much wetter and lakes expanded,[18] especially during the first stage[30] of the Central Andean Pluvial Event.[31] The late Pleistocene—early Holocene wet period was particularly noticeable in the Altiplano, where two separate phases of the Lake Tauca occurred.[32] The last glacial maximum was drier[33] and colder, leading to a total disappearance of vegetation[34] and a drying of the lake between 22,000 and 14,000 years ago.[35] During the middle Holocene dry period,[18] the lake may have dried up completely, forming a bog.[13] After about 4,000 years ago, moisture availability increased again,[36] while a moist epoch between 6,500 and 5,000 years ago was temporary.[37] Climate variability influenced human settlement in the region during the Holocene, which took place mainly during wetter periods[38] and became concentrated in several environmentally favourable spaces during dry periods.[17]
^Servicio Nacional de Turismo (Chile) (23 March 2018). Ruta del Desierto (Report) (in Spanish). p. 14. Archived from the original(PDF) on 7 October 2021. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
^Valenzuela, América; Chiappe, Carlos (26 September 2024). "Política estatal en territorio indígena: Los negocios étnicos turísticos (NET) en San Pedro de Atacama, Norte de Chile". The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology: 9. doi:10.1111/jlca.12742.
^Romero, Hugo; Kampf, Stephanie (2003). "Impacts of Climate Fluctuations and Climate Changes on the Sustainable Development of the Arid Norte Grande in Chile". Climate and Water. Advances in Global Change Research. Vol. 16. Springer, Dordrecht. p. 94. doi:10.1007/978-94-015-1250-3_5. ISBN978-90-481-6386-1.
^Ríos-Escalante, Patricio De los; Morrone, Juan J.; Rivera, Reinaldo (1 January 2013). "A checklist of Hyalella (Amphipoda) from Chile". Crustaceana. 86 (12): 1429. doi:10.1163/15685403-00003256. ISSN1568-5403.
Núñez, Lautaro; Loyola, Rodrigo; Cartajena, Isabel; López, Patricio; Santander, Boris; Maldonado, Antonio; de Souza, Patricio; Carrasco, Carlos (February 2018). "Miscanti-1: Human occupation during the arid Mid-Holocene event in the high-altitude lakes of the Atacama Desert, South America". Quaternary Science Reviews. 181: 109–122. Bibcode:2018QSRv..181..109N. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.12.010. ISSN0277-3791.