'Aucanquilcha' is a massive
stratovolcano located in the
Antofagasta Region of northern
Chile, just south of the border with
Bolivia. It is composed of a number of overlapping cones along a
10 km (6 mi) long ridge that forms the summit. There is
fumarolic activity and voluminous
sulfur deposits in the summit region. During the
Pleistocene ice ages, an extensive
ice cap with an area over 45 km² (17 mi²) mantled the upper slopes, extending down as low as
4,600 m (15,000 ft) and leaving large
moraines.
A sulfur
mine was located near the summit of Aucanquilcha, which was the world's highest mine until it closed in the 1990s, and it was serviced by perhaps the highest driveable
road in the world, but this road is no longer usable by vehicles. The highest permanent human habitation was a miners' barracks at about
5,500 m (18,000 ft). Mining originally began on the volcano in 1913, initially using
llamas as pack animals to carry down the sulfur. An aerial cable system extending for
22 km (14 mi) was completed in 1935, to lower the sulfur in buckets. Eventually this was replaced by the road which
switchbacked up to the summit and was capable of supporting 20-ton mining trucks.
References
★
Global Volcanism Program: Aucanquilcha
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The Andes: A Guide for Climbers (3rd ed.), , John, Biggar, Andes Publishing (Scotland), ,
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Volcanes de Chile, , Oscar, González-Ferrán, Santiago, Chile: Instituto Geográfico Militar, , (in Spanish; also includes volcanoes of Argentina, Bolivia, and Peru)
★
Volcanoes of the Central Andes, , Shanaka L., De Silva, Springer-Verlag, ,
★
The High Andes, , Loren, McIntyre, National Geographic, (includes description and photos of Aucanquilcha summit road and mine)