The
Coastal Region of Peru
Peru's coast is a bleak,
often rocky, and mountainous desert that runs from Chile to
Ecuador, punctuated by fifty-two small rivers that descend
through steep, arid mountains and empty into the Pacific.
The Costa is a strange land of great dunes and rolling
expanses of barren sand, at once a desert but with periods
of humidity as high as 90 percent in the winter from June to
September, when temperatures in Lima average about 16
degrees Celsius. Temperatures along the coast rise near the
equator in the north, where the summer can be blazingly hot,
and fall to cooler levels in the south. If climatic
conditions are right, there can be a sudden burst of
delicate plant life at certain places on the lunar-like
landscape, made possible by the heavy mist. Normally,
however, the mist is only sufficient to dampen the air, and
the sand remains bleakly sterile. These conditions greatly
favor the preservation of delicate archaeological remains.
The environment also facilitates human habitation and
housing because the climate is benign and the lack of rain
eases the need for water-tight roofing.
Humans have lived for
over 10,000 years in the larger coastal valleys, fishing,
hunting, and gathering along the rich shoreline, as well as
domesticating crops and inventing irrigation systems. The
largest of these littoral oases became the sites of towns,
cities, religious centers, and the seats of ancient nations.
Although migration from the highlands and other provincial
regions has long occurred, the movement of people to the
Costa was greatly stimulated by the growth of the fishing
industry, which transformed villages and towns into
frontier-like cities, such as Chimbote. In the early 1990s,
over 53 percent of the nation's people lived in these
sharply delimited coastal valleys. As the population becomes
ever more concentrated in the coastal urban centers, people
increasingly overrun the rich and ancient irrigated
agricultural lands, such as those in the Rímac Valley where
greater Lima is situated, and the Chicama Valley at the site
of the city of Trujillo. Although the region contains
160,500 square kilometers of land area, only 4 percent, or
6,900 square kilometers of it, is arable. By 1990 population
growth had increased the density of habitation to 1,715
persons for each square kilometer of arable land. Throughout
all the coastal valleys, human settlements remain totally
dependent on the waters that flow from the Andes along
canals and aqueducts first designed and built 3,000 years
ago. Here, uncontrolled and unplanned urban growth competes
directly with scarce and vitally needed agricultural land,
steadily removing it from productive use.
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