(Redirected from Austral Zone)The 'Zona Austral' (English: ''Austral Zone'') is one of the five
natural regions into which
CORFO divided continental
Chile in
1950. It is surrounded by the
Southern Zone and the
Chacao Channel to the North, the
Pacific Ocean and
Drake's Passage to the South and West, and the
Andean mountains and
Argentina to the East.
Geography
Physical geography
In the far south (Chile Austral), which extends from Chacao Channel to
Cape Horn, the Andes and the South Pacific meet. This district of the the country is mountainous, heavily-forested and inhospitable. The deeply-indented coast line is filled with islands which preserve the general outline of the continent southward to the Fuegian archipelago, the outside groups forming a continuation of the
Chilean Coast Range. The heavy and continuous rainfall throughout this region, especially in the latitude of
Chiloé, gives rise to a large number of rivers and lakes. Farther south this excessive precipitation is in the form of snow in the
Andes, forming
glaciers at a comparatively low level which in places discharge into the inlets and bays of the sea. The extreme southern part of this region extends eastward to the
Atlantic entrance to the Strait of Magellan, and includes the greater part of the
Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego with all the islands lying south and west of it. There are some comparatively level stretches of country immediately north of the Strait, partly forested and partlygrassy plains, where sheep farming has been established with some degree of success, but the greater part of this extreme southern territory is mountainous, cold, wet and inhospitable. The perpetual snow-line here descends to 3,500 to 4,000 ft. above sea-level, and the forest growth does not rise above an altitude of 1,000 to 1,500 ft.
Mountains
From the latitude of
Michinmahuida volcano southwards a well-defined western longitudinal valley, occupied by the
Carretera Austral, divides the Andes into two chains, the eastern being the main chain, to which belong mounts Ventisquero Sur, Barros Arana and Alto Nevado, while the western chain, broken into imposing blocks, contains several high volcanic peaks such as
Corcovado,
Yanteles and
Melimoyu.
A important transverse mountain range of the Andes separates the valleys of the rivers
Simpson and
Ibañez. This section is dominated by the active
Hudson volcano and the jaggy
Cerro Castillo.
Southward from General Carrera lake is found a wide oblique opening in the range, through which flows the river Baker. The main chain of the Andes in the west is an enormous rugged mass of ice and snow of an average height of 9000 ft., sending glaciers to all the western fjords.
Monte San Valentin (13,314 ft.) is the culminating point of the Andes in the region extending from 49 deg. to 46 deg. S. lat.
Monte San Lorenzo, detached from the main chain of the Andes, is 12,156 ft. high.
The section from 48° to 52° S. lat. is a continuous ice-capped mountain range, and some of the glaciers extend from the eastern lakes to the western channels, where they reach the sea-level. The highest mountain in the section is
Lautaro volcano, but the most famous are whose that compose the
Cordillera del Paine in the south and the
Fitz Roy group in the north. Southernmost part of this zone is formed by two small parallel ranges called
Cordillera Sarmiento and
Cordillera Riesco, which are separated by the
Fjord of the Mountains.
From the 52 deg. S. lat. up to Strait of Magellan, the western slope of the Cordillera does not, properly speaking, exist. Abrupt walls overlook the Pacific, and great longitudinal and transversal channels and fjords run right through the heart of the range, cutting it generally in a direction more or less oblique to its axis, the result of movements of the earth's crust. This region is not fully explored, and all that is known of it is that it is principally composed of the same rocks as the Fuegian Andes, and that the greater part of its upper valleys is occupied by glaciers that reach down to the sea amid dense forest.
The Cordillera of the Andes in Tierra del Fuego is formed of crystalline schists, and culminates in the snow-capped peaks of
Mount Darwin and
Monte Sarmiento in the
Cordillera Darwin, which contains glaciers of greater extent than those of
Mont Blanc. The extent of the glaciers is considerable in this region, which, geographically, is more complex than was formerly supposed. Although, in the explored portion of the Fuegian chain, the volcanoes which have been mentioned from time to time have not been met with, there seem to have existed to the south, on the islands, many neo-volcanic rocks, some of which appear to be contemporaneous with the basaltic sheet that covers a part of eastern Patagonia.
Farther south the Andes terminates in Cape Horn. In this section the mountains are composed principally of crystalline rocks, and their heights are inconsiderable when compared with those of the northern Andes.
Coasts
The continental coastline features numerous inlets and fjords, from which the mountains seem to rise straight up to great elevations; this is, for example, the case with the
Cerro Macá (2,300 meters) near
Puerto Aysén. The rest of the land consists of literally thousands of islands forming numerous archipelagos interwoven with sometimes-narrow channels, which provide the main routes of navigation. The grouping of such islands shows that they are in part the summits of a submerged mountain chain, a continuation southward of the
Chilean Coast Range. Three groups of these, called
Chiloé,
Guaitecas and
Chonos archipelagoes, lie North of the
Taitao Peninsula.
The largest island of this portion of Austral Chile is
Chiloé, which is inhabited. Some of the smaller islands of these groups are also inhabited, though the excessive rainfall of these latitudes and the violent westerly storms render them highly unfavourable for human occupation. Some of the smallest islands are barren rocks, but the majority of them are covered with forests. These archipelagoes are separated from the mainland in the north by the gulfs of
Ancud and
Corcovado, 30 to 35 mi wide, which appear to be a submerged part of the great
Chilean Central Valley, and farther south
by the narrower
Moraleda Channel, which terminates southward
in a confusing network of passages between the mainland and the
islands of the Chonos group.
Below the Taitao peninsula is the broad open
Gulf of Penas, which carries the coast-line eastward fully 100 mi and is noticeably free from islands, with some exceptions. The northern entrance to
Messier Channel is through this gulf. Messier, Pitt, Sarmiento and Smyth's Channels, which form a comparatively safe and remarkably picturesque inside route for ships, about 338 mi in length, separate another series of archipelagoes from the mainland. These channels are in places narrow and tortuous. Among the islands which thickly fringe this part of the coast, the largest are Merino Jarpa (lying within
Baker Channel),
Prat,
Campana (part of
Guayaneco Archipelago),
Little Wellington,
Wellington and Mornington (of the
Wellington Archipelago),
Madre de Dios, Duke of York,
Chatham,
Hanover, Cambridge, Contreras, Rennell and the Queen Adelaide group of small barren rocks and islands lying immediately north of the Pacific entrance to the
Strait of Magellan. The large number of English names on this coast is due to the fact that the earliest detailed survey of this region was made by English naval officers; the charts prepared from their surveys are still in use and form the basis of allsubsequent maps.
Belonging to the
Tierra del Fuego archipelago south of the Strait of Magellan are
Desolación,
Santa Inés,
Clarence,
Capitán Aracena,
Dawson,
Londonderry,
Hoste,
Navarino and
Wollaston islands, with innumerable smaller islands and rocks fringing their shores and filling the channels between them.
The far south contains large expanses of pastures that are best suited for raising sheep, mainly on
Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego. The area's other main economic activity is oil and natural gas extraction from the areas around the Strait of Magellan. This strait is one of the world's important sea-lanes because it unites the Atlantic and Pacific oceans through a channel that avoids the rough open waters off
Cape Horn. The channel is perilous, however, and Chilean pilots guide all vessels through it.
Hydrography
Rivers
The
Comau Fjord and
Vodudahue River traverse the densely wooded country in a north-westerly direction from the Andes to the north-eastern shore of the Gulf of Chacao. This area is home to
PumalÃn Park. Continuing southward, the
Yelcho is the next important river to traverse this region. Forming part of its basin is the
Futaleufú River, which drains a large area of
Argentine territory. Yelcho flows north-west from
Yelcho Lake to the Gulf of Corcovado. The
Palena is another river of the same character, having its source in a large frontier lake, which is called General Paz or General Vintter in Argentina and Palena in Chile. It flows for some distance through Argentine territory before crossing into Chile. It receives one large tributary from the south, the
Pico River, and enters an estuary of the Gulf of Corcovado a little north of the 44th parallel.
The
Cisnes is wholly a Chilean river, draining an extensive Andean region between the 44th and 45th parallels and discharging
into the
Puyuhuapi Channel, which separates
Magdalena Island
from the mainland. The
Aisén River also has its source near the 46th parallel, and drains a mountainous region as far north es the 45th parallel, receiving numerous tributaries, and discharging a large volume of water into the
Aysén Fjord. The next large river is the
Baker River, through which the waters of lakes
General Carrera and
Cochrane, find their way to the Pacific. Both of these large lakes are crossed by the boundary line. The Baker discharges into
Baker Channel. The course of the river from lake General Carrera is south and south-west, the short range of mountains in which are found the cerros
San ValentÃn and
Arenales forcing it southward for an outlet. Baker inlet also receives the waters of still another large Argentine-Chilean lake,
O'Higgins Lake. Its north-west arm drains into the
Pascua River. After a short north-westerly course the river discharges into Baker Inlet in lat. 48 13' S., long. 73 24' W. South of Pascua river there are
no large rivers on this coast, but the narrow fjords penetrate deeply into the mountains and bring away the drainage of their snow-capped, storm-swept elevations. A peculiar network of fjords and connecting channels terminating inland in a peculiarly shaped body of water with long, widely branching arms, called Worsley Sound, Obstruction Sound and
Última Esperanza Sound, covers an extensive area between the 51st and 53rd parallels, and extends nearly to the Argentine frontier.
It has the characteristics of a tidewater river and drains an extensive region.
A noteworthy peculiarity of southern Chile, from the Taitao peninsula to Tierra del Fuego, is the large number of glaciers formed on the western and southern slopes of the Andes and other high elevations, which discharge direct into these deeply cut estuaries. Some of the larger lakes of the Andes have glaciers discharging into them. The formation of these icy streams at comparatively low levels, with their discharge direct into tidewater estuaries, is a phenomenon not to be found elsewhere
in the same latitudes.
Lakes
The great Andean lakes of
Palena (near the 44th parallel), General Carrera (in lat 46°30' S.), Cochrane (47° 15' S.) and O'Higgins (49° S.), lie partly within Chilean territory. In Argentina are called, respectively, General Paz (also is known as General Vintter), Buenos Aires, Pueyrredón and San MartÃn. Towards the coast, other important lakes are
Presidente Rios Lake,
Laguna San Rafael and
Yulton Lake.
Southward from the southern portion of
Southern Patagonian Ice Field (about 51° S. lat.), lakes include
Del Toro and
Sarmiento. The former overflows into Última Esperanza Sound.
In the extreme south of Chile mainland is
Laguna Blanca, a large fresh-water lake in lat. 52° 30' S.,
Notable lakes in Tierra del Fuego include
Fagnano (shared with Argentina),
Blanco and
Ofhidro.
Climate
In the northern part of the far south, there is still plenty of rainfall. For instance, Puerto Aisén, at 45°24' south latitude, receives 2,973.3 millimeters of rain per year. However, unlike in
Valdivia, the rain falls more or less evenly throughout the year in Puerto Aisén. The summer months average 206.1 millimeters, whereas the winter months average 300 millimeters. The temperatures at sea level in Puerto Aisén average 13.6 °C in the summer months and 4.7 °C in the winter months. Although the area generally is chilly and wet, the combination of channels, fjords, snowcapped mountains, and islands of all shapes and sizes within such a narrow space makes for breathtaking views. The area is still heavily forested, although some of the native species of trees that grow in the central and southern parts of the country have given way to others better adapted to a generally colder climate.
The southern part of the far south includes the city of
Punta Arenas, which, with about 125,000 inhabitants, is the southernmost city of any appreciable size in the world. It receives much less precipitation; its annual total is only 438.5 millimeters, or a little more than what Valdivia receives in the month of June alone. This precipitation is distributed more or less evenly throughout the year, with the two main summer months receiving a monthly average of thirty-one millimeters and the winter months 38.9 millimeters, some of it in the form of snow. Temperatures are colder than in the rest of the country. The summer months average 11.1 °C, and the winter months average 2.5 °C. The virtually constant wind from the South Pacific Ocean makes the air feel much colder.
References
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