The Atacama desert on the western coast of South America
is the driest in the world. There are sites here where there has been no
rainfall in recorded history and erosion occurs primarily from the wind.
Such places look like the surface of Mars and there is almost no trace
of life.
If rain occurs only once in a thousand years, it will fall
uselessly on sterile soil. However, if the interval between rains is a
decade or even a generation, life often manages to hang on. Seeds and
bulbs may lie dormant in the soil for lengthy periods, waiting for
their chance to reproduce. When enough rain comes, they germinate,
grow rapidly and the desert turns into a garden. Flowers bloom, seeds
form and are spread. Then everything dies and awaits the next
opportunity after one, five or thirty years. For a few weeks the
desert is an astonishing spectacle. Not just a few flowers, but
thousands of individuals of each species tend to bloom
simultaneously. Species often flower in sequence, so that sometimes a
valley will be purple one day, yellow two weeks later and blue after
that. In places a veritable carpet of color covers soil which appeared
to be lifeless just a few weeks before.
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The "Desierto Florido" (Flowering desert) is a remarkable
phenomenon which usually takes place when "El
Niño" causes the ocean currents to shift and direct storms
towards the desert. The finest manifestation of such a flowering
usually occurs in northern Chile between the cities of La Serena and
Copiapó. There were excellent floraciónes in 1991 and
1997. The 1997 event was one of the most powerful "El Niño"
events in recorded history so that the desert was briefly full of
flowers during September 1997, which was when most of the pictures on
this page were taken. Another, lesser event occurred in September
2000 and as of this writing (August, 2002) after a very rainy winter,
it is clear that there will be a major floración this year.
Stay tuned.
In the south of the region, near La Serena, the median
rainfall is about 50mm. This is enough to support a desert ecosystem, so
that the area is covered with a low density of scruffy-looking bushes and
in most years a few flowers appear in the wetter places. This desert bursts
into color when rains are heavy. Towards the north, near Copiapó,
annual rainfall is only a few mm so the hillsides are almost completely
barren 99% of the time. This makes the contrast between what is usually
there and what occurs during the rare "floraciones" more dramatic. North
of Copiapó, the interval between rains is so long that seeds cannot
not survive and flowers appear only in isolated places with special microclimates.
Tourists come to this part of Chile from all over the world to see
the floración when the rains have been right. During the 1997
event, a number of friends and collegues asked for pictures of the
flowers. Rather than clog their email in-basket with gratuitous
photographs, I put this small gallery of pictures on our WWW site for
the enjoyment of them and anyone else interested. I have left it on
our WWW page since when a floración is not occurring, it is
nice to be able to show people what it looks like.
In order to keep download time to a minimum, the images are broken
up into groups of no more than 12 pictures. Each group contains a
thumbnail image of each picture and some descriptive text. You can
click on each thumbnail image to see the image in full
resolution. With a decent Internet connection a group of thumbnail
photos will download fairly quickly. Individual full resolution images
will take a few seconds, depending on how fast your connection is. But
don't fail to click on the image of Alstroemeria magnifica either here
or at the top of the page. Imagine yourself in the desert with
countless numbers of such flowers as far as the eye can see and you
will have an idea of why people get enthusiastic about the phenomenon
and returned frequently to see the color while they still could.
Photo Galeries
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