Los Glaciares National Park
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
State Party | Argentina |
Type | Natural |
Criteria | vii, viii |
Identification | #145 |
Regionb | Latin America and the Caribbean |
Inscription History |
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Formal Inscription: | 1981 5th Session |
a Name as officially inscribed on the WH List |
Parque Nacional Los Glaciares (Spanish: The Glaciers) is a national park in the Santa Cruz Province, in Argentine Patagonia. It comprises an area of 4459 km² [1] . In 1981 it was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.
The national park, created in 1937, is the second largest in Argentina. Its name refers to the giant ice cap (the biggest outside Antarctica and Greenland) in the Andes range that feeds 47 large glaciers, of which only 13 flow towards the Atlantic Ocean. In other parts of the world, glaciers start at a height of at least 2,500 meters above mean sea level, but due to the size of the Ice Cap, these glaciers begin at only 1,500 m, sliding down to 200 m AMSL, eroding the surface of the mountains that support them.
Los Glaciares, of which 30% is covered by ice, can be divided in two parts, each corresponding with one of the two stretched big lakes partially contained by the Park: the Lake Argentino (1,466 km², the biggest in Argentina) in the south, and the Lake Viedma (1,100 km²) in the north. Both lakes feed the Santa Cruz River, that flows down to Puerto Santa Cruz on the Atlantic. In between the two halves there a non-touristic zone without lakes called Zona Centro.
The northern half consists of part of the Viedma Lake, the Viedma Glacier and a few minor glaciers, and a number of mountains very popular among fans of climbing and trekking, including Mount Fitz Roy and Cerro Torre.
The southern part has, as well as a number of smaller ones, the major glaciers Perito Moreno Glacier, Upsala Glacier and Spegazzini Glacier, which flow into Lake Argentino. Typical excursion on boats travel between icebergs to visit Bahía Onelli, and the otherwise unaccessible Spegazzini and Upsala. The Perito Moreno is reachable by land.
Los Glaciares National Park | |
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IUCN Category II (National Park) | |
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Location: | Santa Cruz Province, Argentina |
Coordinates: | |
Area: | 4459 km² |
Established: | 1937 |
Governing body: | Administración de Parques Nacionales |
The mountains hold most of the humidity from the Pacific Ocean, letting through only the ice coldness (annual average of 7.5 °C) and creating an arid steppe on the Argentine side of the range. This holds ñandúes, guanacos, cougars, and gray foxes, who have suffered from the invasion of the cattle industry and are currently endangered, but find shelter inside the national park. There are over 1,000 species of birds in the area (condors, eagles, and others), but only 100 have been registered. Between the ice and the Patagonian steppe there is a fertile area of forests composed mainly of lengas and guindos, but also ñires. Within these more hospitable areas also live huemul deers and Torrent Ducks.
Los Glaciares is a major attraction for international tourists, and has an annual budget of one million dollars (1994). Starting points of tours are the village of El Calafate at the shore of Lake Argentino but outside the park, where the park's administration has its headquarters, and El Chaltén village in the northern part of the park, at the foot of the Fitz Roy. Other touristic points in the park include Lago del Desierto and Lago Roca.
[edit] See also
[edit] Reference
- Kearney, Alan, 1993. Mountaineering in Patagonia. Seattle USA: Cloudcap.
[edit] External links
- Official site (English/Spanish)
- UNESCO World Heritage (English)
- Encyclopaedia Britannica, Los Glaciares National Park (English)
- Parque Nacional Los Glaciare (English)
- Fauna(Spanish)
- Paisaje Natural (Spanish)
National parks of Argentina (by region) |
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Northwest: Baritú | Calilegua | El Rey | Los Cardones | Campo de los Alisos | Chaqueña: Copo | Río Pilcomayo | Chaco | Mesopotamia: Iguazú* | Mburucuyá | El Palmar | Cuyo: San Guillermo | Talampaya* | El Leoncito | Sierra de las Quijadas | Pampas: Quebrada del Condorito | Lihué Calel | Predelta | Patagonia: Laguna Blanca | Lanín | Los Arrayanes | Nahuel Huapi | Lago Puelo | Los Alerces | Francisco P. Moreno | Los Glaciares* | Monte León | Tierra del Fuego |
Cueva de las Manos, Río Pinturas | Iguazú | Ischigualasto / Talampaya Natural Parks | Jesuit Block and Estancias of Córdoba | Guaraní Jesuit Missions: San Ignacio Miní, Santa Ana, Nuestra Señora de Loreto and Santa María Mayor (w/ Brazil) | Los Glaciares | Valdés Peninsula | Quebrada de Humahuaca