Central
Chile
Central Chile (Chile
Central), home to a majority of the population, includes the
three largest metropolitan areas-- Santiago, Valparaíso,
and Concepción. It extends from about 32° south latitude
to about 38° south latitude. The climate is of the
temperate Mediterranean type, with the amount of rainfall
increasing considerably and progressively from north to
south. In the Santiago area, the average monthly
temperatures are about 19.5° C in the summer months of
January and February and 7.5° C in the winter months of
June and July. The average monthly precipitation is no more
than a trace in January and February and 69.7 millimeters in
June and July. By contrast, in Concepción the average
monthly temperatures are somewhat lower in the summer at
17.6° C but higher in the winter at 9.3° C, and the amount
of rain is much greater. In the summer, Concepción receives
an average of twenty millimeters of rain per month; in June
and July, the city is pounded by an average of 253
millimeters per month. The numerous rivers greatly increase
their flow as a result of the winter rains and the spring
melting of the Andean snows, and they contract considerably
in the summer. The combination of abundant snow in the Andes
and relatively moderate winter temperatures creates
excellent conditions for Alpine skiing.
The topography of central
Chile includes a coastal range of mountains running parallel
to the Andes. Lying between the two mountain ranges is the
so-called Central Valley, which contains some of the richest
agricultural land in the country, especially in its northern
portion. The area just north and south of Santiago is a
large producer of fruits, including the grapes from which
the best Chilean wines are made. Exports of fresh fruit
began to rise dramatically in the mid-1970s because Chilean
growers had the advantage of being able to reach markets in
the Northern Hemisphere during that part of the world's
winter. Most of these exports, such as grapes, apples, and
peaches, go by refrigerator ships, but some, such as
berries, go by airfreight.
The southern portion of
central Chile contains a mixture of some excellent
agricultural lands, many of which were covered originally
with old-growth forests. They were cleared for agriculture
but were soon exhausted of their organic matter and left to
erode. Large tracts of this worn-out land, many of them on
hilly terrain, have been reforested for the lumber,
especially for the cellulose and paper industries. New
investments during the 1980s in these industries transformed
the rural economy of the region. The pre-Andean highlands
and some of the taller and more massive mountains in the
coastal range (principally the Cordillera de Nahuelbuta)
still contain large tracts of old-growth forests of
remarkable beauty, some of which have been set aside as
national parks. Between the coastal mountains and the ocean,
many areas of central Chile contain stretches of land that
are lower than the Central Valley and are generally quite
flat. The longest beaches can be found in such sections.
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