Chile
Geography - A Long Narrow Nation
In a classic book on the
natural setting and people of Chile, Benjamín Subercaseaux
Zañartu, a Chilean writer, describes the country's
geography as loca (crazy). The book's English
translator renders this term as "extravagant."
Whether crazy or extravagant, there is little question that
Chile's territorial shape is certainly among the world's
most unusual. From north to south, Chile extends 4,270
kilometers, and yet it only averages 177 kilometers east to
west. On a map, Chile looks like a long ribbon reaching from
the middle of South America's west coast straight down to
the southern tip of the continent, where it curves slightly
eastward. Cape Horn, the southernmost point in the Americas,
where the Pacific and Atlantic oceans turbulently meet, is
Chilean territory. Chile's northern neighbors are Peru and
Bolivia, and its border with Argentina to the east, at 5,150
kilometers, is one of the world's longest.
Chile's shape was
determined by the fact that it began as a Spanish settlement
on the western side of the mighty cordillera of the Andes,
in the central part of the country. This range, which
includes the two tallest peaks in the Americas--Aconcagua
(6,959 meters) and Nevado Ojos del Salado (6,880 meters)--is
a formidable barrier, whose passes to the Argentine side are
covered by a heavy blanket of snow during the winter months.
As a result, Chile could expand beyond its original colonial
territory only to the south and north. The colony grew
southward by occupying lands populated by indigenous groups,
and it grew northward by occupying sections of both Peru and
Bolivia that were eventually awarded to Chile in the
aftermath of the War of the Pacific (1879-83).
The northern two-thirds
of Chile lie on top of the telluric Nazca Plate, which,
moving eastward about ten centimeters a year, is forcing its
way under the continental plate of South America. This
movement has resulted in the formation of the Peru-Chile
Trench, which lies beyond a narrow band of coastal waters
off the northern two-thirds of the country. The trench is
about 150 kilometers wide and averages about 5,000 meters in
depth. At its deepest point, just north of the port of
Antofagasta, it plunges to 8,066 meters. Although the
ocean's surface obscures this fact, most of Chile lies at
the edge of a profound precipice.
The same telluric
displacements that created the Peru-Chile Trench make the
country highly prone to earthquakes. During the twentieth
century, Chile has been struck by twenty-eight major
earthquakes, all with a force greater than 6.9 on the
Richter scale (see Glossary). The strongest of these
occurred in 1906 (registering an estimated 8.4 on the
Richter scale) and in 1960 (reaching 8.75). This latter
earthquake occurred on May 22, the day after another major
quake measuring 7.25 on the Richter scale, and covered an
extensive section of south-central Chile. It caused a tidal
wave that decimated several fishing villages in the south
and raised or lowered sections of the coast as much as two
meters. The clash between the earth's surface plates has
also generated the Andes, a geologically young mountain
range that, in Chilean territory alone, includes about 620
volcanoes, many of them active. Almost sixty of these had
erupted in the twentieth century by the early 1990s. More
than half of Chile's land surface is volcanic in origin.
About 80 percent of the
land in Chile is made up of mountains of some form or other.
Most Chileans live near or on these mountains. The
majestically snowcapped Andes and their precordillera
elevations provide an ever-present backdrop to much of the
scenery, but there are other, albeit less formidable,
mountains as well. Although they seemingly can appear
anywhere, the non-Andean mountains usually form part of
transverse and coastal ranges. The former, located most
characteristically in the near north and the far north
natural regions, extend with various shapes from the Andes
to the ocean, creating valleys with an east-west direction.
The latter are evident mainly in the center of the country
and create what is commonly called the Central Valley (Valle
Central) between them and the Andes. In the far south, the
Central Valley runs into the ocean's waters. At this
location, the higher elevations of the coastal range facing
the Andes become a multiplicity of islands, forming an
intricate labyrinth of channels and fjords that have been an
enduring challenge to maritime navigators.
Much of Chile's coastline
is rugged, with surf that seems to explode against the rocks
lying at the feet of high bluffs. This collision of land and
sea gives way every so often to lovely beaches of various
lengths, some of them encased by the bluffs. The Humboldt
Current, which originates northwest of the Antarctic
Peninsula (which just into the Bellingshausen Sea) and runs
the full length of the Chilean coast, makes the water
frigid. Swimming at Chile's popular beaches in the central
part of the country, where the water gets no warmer than 15°
C in the summer, requires more than a bit of fortitude.
Chilean territory extends
as far west as Polynesia. The best known of Chile's Pacific
Islands is Easter Island (Isla de Pascua, also known by its
Polynesian name of Rapa Nui), with a population of 2,800
people. Located 3,600 kilometers west of Chile's mainland
port of Caldera, just below the Tropic of Capricorn, Easter
Island provides Chile a gateway to the Pacific. It is noted
for its 867 monoliths (Moais), which are huge (up to twenty
meters high) and mysterious, expressionless faces sculpted
of volcanic stone. The Islas Juan Fernández, located 587
kilometers west of Valparaíso, are the locale of a small
fishing settlement. They are famous for their lobster and
the fact that one of the islands, Isla Robinson Crusoe, is
where Alexander Selkirk, the inspiration for Daniel Defoe's
novel, was marooned for about four years.
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