El Tatio, Chile

El Tatio Geysers – Between the Ice and the Heat of the Atacama


El Tatio Geysers Field
El Tatio is considered one of the largest and highest geyser fields in South America and the world. There are more than 80 geysers at an altitude of 4.200 meters.
adobe chapel
A roadside chapel halfway to El Tatio.
Great Coiron
A coiron of considerable dimensions stands out among pairs in the icy lands of the Andean altiplano.
coirones
A golden tuft of coiron, the hardy bushes that abound in the highlands of the Andean mountain range
Fox Tails or Bottle Wiper
Detail of the vegetation that closes the heated lagoons of the Puritana spa
Wool cross
A cross dressed in wool crowns a peasant chapel in a hamlet lost in nowhere on the way to El Tatio.
Boiling water
One of El Tatio's many geysers, clustered at more than 4.200 meters in altitude.
take off
Flock of flamingos take flight from the icy lake where they fed.
flamingoes pond
Flamingos in a pond that has frozen water and traps them, at night, until sunrise.
Between Ice and Heat
Ice formed by the freezing of boiling water projected by El Tatio geysers
Decorated mud
A lama marked and blessed with wool ornaments placed by the owners.
Trio of Atacama Camelides
Herds of llamas, vicuñas and alpacas are often seen in the highlands around El Tatio.
silhouettes
Well-drawn silhouettes against the steam released by the El Tatio geysers.
El Tatio's SPA
Bathers share the warm water from one of El Tatio's lagoons, while the surrounding temperature remains negative and there is ice on the ground.
The reward
Silhouettes of travelers bathing in the invigorating waters of the El Tatio thermal springs.
Puritan's Lagoon
Visitors relax in one of the heated lakes at Termas de Puritama, between San Pedro de Atacama and the Putana volcano.
El Tatio Geyser
El Tatio geiser projects boiling, sulphurous water.
Another Geyser from El Tatio
Geiser projects heat and steam from the stony soil of the Altiplano de Atacama.
Surrounded by supreme volcanoes, the geothermal field of El Tatio, in the Atacama Desert it appears as a Dantesque mirage of sulfur and steam at an icy 4200 m altitude. Its geysers and fumaroles attract hordes of travelers.

The Explora Atacama, one of the most renowned hotels in San Pedro de Atacama, will accompany your exquisite and sophisticated dinners, with some of the best Chilean wines.

So watered, the repasts delight and delight guests without reservations. But the early hours of the excursions to which they enlist do not go well.

The van departs from the courtyard – the former stables of San Pedro de Atacama – in the dark at 5:30 am, more than two hours before dawn.

Leave the city. Little by little, it advances parallel to the border with Bolivia and to the Andean sector of mountains and volcanoes that establishes it. Without being able to see anything of the scenery around, a good part of the eight passengers in the van let themselves sleep.

Attacking the Ascension to the El Tatio Plateau

A faint dawn opens the day. Nicholas, the guide, decides to save us waste and wakes up the entourage. Around this time, we skirted a shallow lagoon, inhabited by flamingos, wild ducks and other less showy birds.

El Tatio Geisers, Atacama, Chile, Between ice and heat

Flamingos in a pond that has frozen water and traps them, at night, until sunrise.

Nicholas takes advantage of the pretext to arouse our attention as well. “Friends, take a good look at the birds… it will seem like I'm making it up, but in these lakes, on cold nights, the birds sleep with their feet stuck in the ice. They only come loose in the morning – or in a little while – when the sun melts it again.”

We had neither way to prove it, nor reason to doubt it. Phenomena were not lacking in the region, far beyond the record-breaking aridity of the Atacama Desert.

We continued to climb through canyons littered with cactuses.

We crossed villages of adobe and lime with their picturesque houses and small churches made of adobe and thatched roof, blessed by crosses that the natives wear in bright wool.

Wool cross, El Tatio Geisers, Atacama, Chile, Between ice and heat

A cross dressed in wool crowns a peasant chapel in a hamlet lost in nowhere on the way to El Tatio.

And we reached the puna de Atacama, the Andean plateau normally considered above 4000 meters.

We spotted herds of vicuñas and lamas, some adorned with colored wool trinkets dangling from their ears. They are placed on them by the natives, in dedicated ceremonies, in the sense of blessing, identification and ownership.

The camelids we admire graze among coirones, also known as wild straw, the dry and cold-resistant low-hanging bushes that paint the vastness yellow.

Coirones, El Tatio Geisers, Atacama, Chile, Between ice and heat

A golden tuft of coiron, the hardy bushes that abound in the highlands of the Andean mountain range

Between Geysers and Fumaroles. El Tatio's Eccentric Geothermal Field

Almost 100 km and two hours after San Pedro de Atacama, the sun was already showing in its full splendor, we detected columns of smoke in the distance and in backlight. At first, they are confused with the product of small fires.

As we get closer, we unveil a Dantesque profusion of seething geysers and fumaroles.

El Tatio Geisers, Atacama, Chile, Between ice and heat

El Tatio is considered one of the largest and highest geyser fields in South America and the world. There are more than 80 geysers at an altitude of 4.200 meters.

Human figures walk through it, walking between the dancing curtains of steam. The indigenous people are used to treating this surreal setting by El Tatio “the old man who cries” or “the grandfather who cries”, in the Kunza dialect they used in the altiplano divided between the Chile, Bolivia and the Argentina.

Kunza became extinct sometime during the XNUMXth century, stifled by the spread of Castilian imposed by Hispanic settlers. Still, the name El Tatio has been passed down from generation to generation. In fact, disseminated behind the backs of backpacking gringos, it became eternal on a world scale.

We had reached the largest geothermal field in the Andes and the Southern Hemisphere, with an area of ​​10km². It is the third largest in the world after Yellowstone (USA) and Dolina Geizerov, member of the Kronotsky National Biosphere Reserve, in kamchatka peninsula, the eastern end of Russia.

At its 4300 meters of altitude, El Tatio is also the alleged geothermal field higher on the face of the Earth, with the eventual dispute of the Bolivian Sol de Mañana, a field between 4800 and 5000 meters but composed almost only of mud pits that release steam and sulphur.

El Tatio Geiser, Atacama, Chile, Between ice and heat

Geiser projects heat and steam from the stony soil of the Altiplano de Atacama.

Neighboring Bolivia creeps in to the side, east of the border established by the Altiplano-Puna volcanic complex, a conglomerate of stratovolcanoes and old caldera that, in prehistoric times, were at the base of gigantic eruptions.

By comparison, the legacy of this volcanic activity is tiny.

The El Tatio geysers project their eruptions at an average height of less than one meter and a maximum of five meters, distances only insignificant if we take into account the world record of the Yellowstone Steamboat geyser: 91 meters.

A Lagoon, Dozens of Travelers in Geothermal Ecstasy

Upon arrival, El Tatio and, in particular, its thermal pool generated successive manifestations of relief and joy in dozens of travelers who had gone ahead and bathed in a kind of natural jacuzzi.

El Tatio Geisers, Atacama, Chile, Between ice and heat

Bathers share the warm water from one of El Tatio's lagoons, while the surrounding temperature remains negative and there is ice on the ground.

Only at that hour did the outside temperature rise to positive. We could prove it by the sudden melting of ice around many of the eighty geysers.

Thus, between the dress and the undress, there was a lapse of unavoidable suffering that the bathers faced. Some with courage, others with pure unconsciousness.

The 30º at which the water sprouted made everything forget: the early morning awakening, the bumpy journey and even the headache that, at least in some of the outsiders, the mountain sickness and occasional alcoholic excesses from the night before, began to cause.

The thermal comfort of the lagoon guaranteed a ritualized, liberating and generative comfort of the warmest chats.

Certain bathers had been in Atacama longer. They were already repeating their incursions into the highlands on the eastern edge of the desert on the border with Argentina and Bolivia.

El Tatio Geisers, Atacama, Chile, Between ice and heat

Silhouettes of travelers bathing in the invigorating waters of the El Tatio thermal springs.

A few would even have climbed to exuberant volcanoes such as Cerro Toco, active Lascar, Licancabur or the neighboring Sairecabur, the last three to skim the 6.000 meters of altitude.

For these gringos, the reward of hot water would last as long as it did, or whatever the guides let it last. In the case of newcomers, it would have to be finished soon. The guides – at least they – knew how treacherous mountain evil could be revealed. And how much it would make customers suffer.

The Extremophile Microorganisms of the Atacama Desert

Other microscopic organisms, much more resistant to adverse conditions and that used those sulfurous waters, take us back to the phenomenal character of the Atacama Desert and its surroundings.

In 2003, a multinational delegation of scientists from NASA and the North American Carnegie Mellon University moved to Atacama with the purpose of implementing the Life in the Atacama, a program to improve the robotic rover vehicles they were preparing to use on the astrobiological mission Spirit.

After thorough investigation, the scientists concluded that only in Atacama had they found spaces without any kind of life. Thus, the place on the face of the Earth most similar to Mars was decreed.

Simultaneously, organic expressions found around proved to be analogous to those present in the early days of Earth, eventually also in the past existence of Mars.

Much more adapted and comfortable than the travelers sharing the pool, these so-called extremophiles have been proliferating for millions of years in the chimneys of the geothermal field. Mountain sickness is not known to cause them any discomfort.

In the particular case of El Tatio, organisms resistant to high water temperatures survive up to 74ºC of the 86ºC recorded in certain geysers, the boiling temperature at local altitude.

El Tatio Geisers, Atacama, Chile, Between ice and heat

One of El Tatio's many geysers, clustered at more than 4.200 meters in altitude.

They generate a kind of microbial mat that transforms into an eccentric sinter, a siliceous or limestone deposit derived from the compaction of microparticles at temperatures lower than those of melting.

The Microbiology of El Tatio vs that of HomePlate on Mars

However, avoiding more obscure intricacies of Physics and Chemistry, the fascination comes from the fact that several of these microstructures present in El Tatio are similar to those found in HomePlate, a 90-meter Martian plateau documented by the Spirit mission, from 2006 to 2010.

The homonymous rover scoured it until, in March 2010, it attacked a grainy soil on the northeastern slope of the formation. It was thus left to prove that the deposits detected there were, like those in El Tatio, biogenetic.

The El Tátio weather pattern dictates that, at around 8:30 am, rising winds disperse the resplendent vapor across the surface of the plateau.

The dazzling light that is installed reduces visibility and makes walking between geysers and chimneys riskier than ever.

El Tatio Geisers, Atacama, Chile, Between ice and heat

Well-drawn silhouettes against the steam released by the El Tatio geysers.

That day was no different. Some bathers who were persistent or who postponed their new submission to the cold outside, kept soaking.

Most of them soon left the thermal pool and aimed at villages in the region of Atacama, Caspana, Toconce, Ayquina, Chiu Chiu or others.

Adobe Chapel, El Tatio Geisers, Atacama, Chile, Between ice and heat

A roadside chapel halfway to El Tatio.

We accepted Nicholas' challenge. We inaugurate the return to San Pedro pueblo with strategic stops that, as promised by the guide, we do not regret.

El Tatio was not the only one geothermal field Of region. On the eminence of Guatin and its parched gorges dotted with cactuses, we stop at one of the Puritama hot springs.

We were almost a thousand meters below El Tatio. With the sun well up on the horizon, the ambient temperature had warmed. Puritama might not share the vaporous exuberance of the geyser field.

It had, however, a series of natural lakes that followed each other from top to bottom in the bed of a stream, surrounded by an eccentric forest of fox glue (fox's tails), as the Hispanics treat the plumeers, also known as clean. -bottles for reasons that stand out from their look.

The profusion of plants formed dense, circular hedges that surrounded each of the ponds. They gave them an atmosphere of retreat that contrasted with that which we had felt at El Tatio.

Puritana Lagoon, El Tatio Geisers, Atacama, Chile, Between ice and heat

Visitors relax in one of the heated lakes at Termas de Puritama, between San Pedro de Atacama and the Putana volcano.

Once upon a time, the Atacama Indians resorted to its waters filled with sodium sulfate to recover from fatigue, arthritis and rheumatism.

Little or no sleep in the previous nights, worn out from successive excursions and walks, we considered the first indication to be justified.

We undressed again. We slipped into a pond without a soul. We recovered the soul and the body until the skin withered and San Pedro de Atacama complain to us.

Easter Island, Chile

The Take-off and Fall of the Bird-Man Cult

Until the XNUMXth century, the natives of Easter Island they carved and worshiped great stone gods. All of a sudden, they started to drop their moai. The veneration of tanatu manu, a half-human, half-sacred leader, decreed after a dramatic competition for an egg.
PN Torres del Paine, Chile

The Most Dramatic Patagonia

Nowhere is the southernmost reaches of South America so breathtaking as the Paine Mountains. There, a natural fort of granite colossi surrounded by lakes and glaciers protrudes from the pampa and submits to the whims of meteorology and light.
Rapa Nui - Easter Island, Chile

Under the Moais Watchful Eye

Rapa Nui was discovered by Europeans on Easter Day 1722. But if the Christian name Easter Island makes sense, the civilization that colonized it by observant moais remains shrouded in mystery.
San Pedro de Atacama, Chile

São Pedro de Atacama: an Adobe Life in the Most Arid of Deserts

The Spanish conquerors had departed and the convoy diverted the cattle and nitrate caravans. San Pedro regained peace but a horde of outsiders discovering South America invaded the pueblo.
Atacama Desert, Chile

Life on the Edges of the Atacama Desert

When you least expect it, the driest place in the world reveals new extraterrestrial scenarios on a frontier between the inhospitable and the welcoming, the sterile and the fertile that the natives are used to crossing.
Saariselka, Finland

The Delightful Arctic Heat

It is said that the Finns created SMS so they don't have to talk. The imagination of cold Nordics is lost in the mist of their beloved saunas, real physical and social therapy sessions.
Robinson Crusoe Island, Chile

Alexander Selkirk: in the Skin of the True Robinson Crusoe

The main island of the Juan Fernández archipelago was home to pirates and treasures. His story was made up of adventures like that of Alexander Selkirk, the abandoned sailor who inspired Dafoe's novel
Puerto Natales-Puerto Montt, Chile

Cruise on board a Freighter

After a long begging of backpackers, the Chilean company NAVIMAG decided to admit them on board. Since then, many travelers have explored the Patagonian canals, side by side with containers and livestock.
Villarrica Volcano, Chile

Ascent to the Villarrica Volcano Crater, in Full Activity

Pucón abuses nature's trust and thrives at the foot of the Villarrica mountain. We follow this bad example along icy trails and conquer the crater of one of the most active volcanoes in South America.
Pucón, Chile

Among the Araucarias of La Araucania

At a certain latitude in longline Chile, we enter La Araucanía. This is a rugged Chile, full of volcanoes, lakes, rivers, waterfalls and the coniferous forests from which the region's name grew. And it is the heart of the pine nuts of the largest indigenous ethnic group in the country: the Mapuche.
Lion, Elephants, PN Hwange, Zimbabwe
Safari
PN Hwange, Zimbabwe

The Legacy of the Late Cecil Lion

On July 1, 2015, Walter Palmer, a dentist and trophy hunter from Minnesota killed Cecil, Zimbabwe's most famous lion. The slaughter generated a viral wave of outrage. As we saw in PN Hwange, nearly two years later, Cecil's descendants thrive.
Young people walk the main street in Chame, Nepal
Annapurna (circuit)
Annapurna Circuit: 1th - Pokhara a ChameNepal

Finally, on the way

After several days of preparation in Pokhara, we left towards the Himalayas. The walking route only starts in Chame, at 2670 meters of altitude, with the snowy peaks of the Annapurna mountain range already in sight. Until then, we complete a painful but necessary road preamble to its subtropical base.
by the shadow
Architecture & Design
Miami, USA

A Masterpiece of Urban Rehabilitation

At the turn of the 25st century, the Wynwood neighbourhood remained filled with abandoned factories and warehouses and graffiti. Tony Goldman, a shrewd real estate investor, bought more than XNUMX properties and founded a mural park. Much more than honoring graffiti there, Goldman founded the Wynwood Arts District, the great bastion of creativity in Miami.
Boats on ice, Hailuoto Island, Finland.
Adventure
Hailuoto, Finland

A Refuge in the Gulf of Bothnia

During winter, the island of Hailuoto is connected to the rest of Finland by the country's longest ice road. Most of its 986 inhabitants esteem, above all, the distance that the island grants them.
Australia Day, Perth, Australian Flag
Ceremonies and Festivities
Perth, Australia

Australia Day: In Honor of the Foundation, Mourning for Invasion

26/1 is a controversial date in Australia. While British settlers celebrate it with barbecues and lots of beer, Aborigines celebrate the fact that they haven't been completely wiped out.
Manaus Theater
Cities
Manaus, Brazil

The Jumps and Starts of the former World Rubber Capital

From 1879 to 1912, only the Amazon River basin generated the latex that, from one moment to another, the world needed and, out of nowhere, Manaus became one of the most advanced cities on the face of the Earth. But an English explorer took the tree to Southeast Asia and ruined pioneer production. Manaus once again proved its elasticity. It is the largest city in the Amazon and the seventh in Brazil.
young saleswoman, nation, bread, uzbekistan
Meal
Fergana Valley, Uzbekistan

Uzbekistan, The Nation That Does Not Lack Bread

Few countries employ cereals like Uzbekistan. In this republic of Central Asia, bread plays a vital and social role. The Uzbeks produce it and consume it with devotion and in abundance.
Bolshoi Zayatski Orthodox Church, Solovetsky Islands, Russia.
Culture
Bolshoi Zayatsky, Russia

Mysterious Russian Babylons

A set of prehistoric spiral labyrinths made of stones decorate Bolshoi Zayatsky Island, part of the Solovetsky archipelago. Devoid of explanations as to when they were erected or what it meant, the inhabitants of these northern reaches of Europe call them vavilons.
4th of July Fireworks-Seward, Alaska, United States
Sport
Seward, Alaska

The Longest 4th of July

The independence of the United States is celebrated, in Seward, Alaska, in a modest way. Even so, the 4th of July and its celebration seem to have no end.
Tokyo's sophisticated houses, where Couchsurfing and your hosts abound.
Traveling
Couchsurfing (Part 1)

Mi Casa, Su Casa

In 2003, a new online community globalized an old landscape of hospitality, conviviality and interests. Today, Couchsurfing welcomes millions of travelers, but it shouldn't be taken lightly.
China's occupation of Tibet, Roof of the World, The occupying forces
Ethnic
Lhasa, Tibet

The Sino-Demolition of the Roof of the World

Any debate about sovereignty is incidental and a waste of time. Anyone who wants to be dazzled by the purity, affability and exoticism of Tibetan culture should visit the territory as soon as possible. The Han civilizational greed that moves China will soon bury millenary Tibet.
Portfolio, Got2Globe, Best Images, Photography, Images, Cleopatra, Dioscorides, Delos, Greece
Got2Globe Photo Portfolio
Got2Globe Portfolio

The Earthly and the Celestial

Dead Sea, Surface of Water, Lower Land, Israel, rest
History
Dead Sea, Israel

Afloat, in the Depths of the Earth

It is the lowest place on the surface of the planet and the scene of several biblical narratives. But the Dead Sea is also special because of the concentration of salt that makes life unfeasible but sustains those who bathe in it.
Palm trees of San Cristobal de La Laguna, Tenerife, Canary Islands
Islands
Tenerife, Canary Islands

East of White Mountain Island

The almost triangular Tenerife has its center dominated by the majestic volcano Teide. At its eastern end, there is another rugged domain, even so, the place of the island's capital and other unavoidable villages, with mysterious forests and incredible abrupt coastlines.
Sampo Icebreaker, Kemi, Finland
Winter White
Kemi, Finland

It's No "Love Boat". Breaks the Ice since 1961

Built to maintain waterways through the most extreme arctic winter, the icebreaker Sampo” fulfilled its mission between Finland and Sweden for 30 years. In 1988, he reformed and dedicated himself to shorter trips that allow passengers to float in a newly opened channel in the Gulf of Bothnia, in clothes that, more than special, seem spacey.
Almada Negreiros, Roça Saudade, Sao Tome
Literature
Saudade, São Tomé, São Tomé and Principe

Almada Negreiros: From Saudade to Eternity

Almada Negreiros was born in April 1893, on a farm in the interior of São Tomé. Upon discovering his origins, we believe that the luxuriant exuberance in which he began to grow oxygenated his fruitful creativity.
Porto Santo, view to the south of Pico Branco
Nature
Terra Chã and Pico Branco footpaths, Porto Santo

Pico Branco, Terra Chã and Other Whims of the Golden Island

In its northeast corner, Porto Santo is another thing. With its back facing south and its large beach, we unveil a mountainous, rugged and even wooded coastline, dotted with islets that dot an even bluer Atlantic.
Sheki, Autumn in the Caucasus, Azerbaijan, Autumn Homes
Autumn
Sheki, Azerbaijan

autumn in the caucasus

Lost among the snowy mountains that separate Europe from Asia, Sheki is one of Azerbaijan's most iconic towns. Its largely silky history includes periods of great harshness. When we visited it, autumn pastels added color to a peculiar post-Soviet and Muslim life.
Kukenam reward
Natural Parks
Mount Roraima, Venezuela

Time Travel to the Lost World of Mount Roraima

At the top of Mount Roraima, there are extraterrestrial scenarios that have resisted millions of years of erosion. Conan Doyle created, in "The Lost World", a fiction inspired by the place but never got to step on it.
on Stage, Antigua, Guatemala
UNESCO World Heritage
Antigua (Antilles), Guatemala

Hispanic Guatemala, the Antigua Fashion

In 1743, several earthquakes razed one of the most charming pioneer colonial cities in the Americas. Antigua has regenerated but preserves the religiosity and drama of its epic-tragic past.
female and cub, grizzly footsteps, katmai national park, alaska
Characters
PN Katmai, Alaska

In the Footsteps of the Grizzly Man

Timothy Treadwell spent summers on end with the bears of Katmai. Traveling through Alaska, we followed some of its trails, but unlike the species' crazy protector, we never went too far.
Glass Bottom Boats, Kabira Bay, Ishigaki
Beaches
Ishigaki, Japan

The Exotic Japanese Tropics

Ishigaki is one of the last islands in the stepping stone that stretches between Honshu and Taiwan. Ishigakijima is home to some of the most amazing beaches and coastal scenery in these parts of the Pacific Ocean. More and more Japanese who visit them enjoy them with little or no bathing.
Armenia Cradle Christianity, Mount Aratat
Religion
Armenia

The Cradle of the Official Christianity

Just 268 years after Jesus' death, a nation will have become the first to accept the Christian faith by royal decree. This nation still preserves its own Apostolic Church and some of the oldest Christian temples in the world. Traveling through the Caucasus, we visit them in the footsteps of Gregory the Illuminator, the patriarch who inspires Armenia's spiritual life.
Train Fianarantsoa to Manakara, Malagasy TGV, locomotive
On Rails
Fianarantsoa-Manakara, Madagascar

On board the Malagasy TGV

We depart Fianarantsoa at 7a.m. It wasn't until 3am the following morning that we completed the 170km to Manakara. The natives call this almost secular train Train Great Vibrations. During the long journey, we felt, very strongly, those of the heart of Madagascar.
U Bein Bridge, Amarapura, Myanmar
Society
u-bein BridgeMyanmar

The Twilight of the Bridge of Life

At 1.2 km, the oldest and longest wooden bridge in the world allows the Burmese of Amarapura to experience Lake Taungthaman. But 160 years after its construction, U Bein is in its twilight.
herd, foot-and-mouth disease, weak meat, colonia pellegrini, argentina
Daily life
Colónia Pellegrini, Argentina

When the Meat is Weak

The unmistakable flavor of Argentine beef is well known. But this wealth is more vulnerable than you think. The threat of foot-and-mouth disease, in particular, keeps authorities and growers afloat.
hippopotami, chobe national park, botswana
Wildlife
Chobe NP, Botswana

Chobe: A River on the Border of Life with Death

Chobe marks the divide between Botswana and three of its neighboring countries, Zambia, Zimbabwe and Namibia. But its capricious bed has a far more crucial function than this political delimitation.
Bungee jumping, Queenstown, New Zealand
Scenic Flights
Queenstown, New Zealand

Queenstown, the Queen of Extreme Sports

In the century. XVIII, the Kiwi government proclaimed a mining village on the South Island "fit for a queen".Today's extreme scenery and activities reinforce the majestic status of ever-challenging Queenstown.