Ojos del Salado | |
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The Chilean summit viewed from the Argentine summit. |
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Elevation | 6,893 m (22,615 ft) [1] |
Prominence | 3,688 m (12,100 ft) [1] |
Listing | Volcanic Seven Summits Seven Second Summits Country high point Ultra |
Location | |
Range | Andes |
Geology | |
Type | Stratovolcano |
Last eruption | 700 AD ± 300 years[2] |
Climbing | |
First ascent | February 26, 1937 Jan Alfred Szczepański Justyn Wojsznis |
Easiest route | Scramble |
Nevado Ojos del Salado ("water source of the salty river") is a massive stratovolcano in the Andes on the Argentina-Chile border and the highest volcano in the world at 6,891 metres (22,608 ft). It is also the second highest mountain in the Western Hemisphere and the highest in Chile. It is located about 600 kilometres (370 mi) north of Aconcagua, the highest mountain in the Western Hemisphere at 6,962 m (22,841 ft).
Due to its location near the Atacama desert, the mountain has very dry conditions with snow only remaining on the peak during winter. Despite the generally dry conditions, there is a permanent crater lake about 100 metres (300 ft) in diameter at an elevation of 6,390 m (20,960 ft) on the eastern side of Ojos del Salado.[3] This is most likely the highest lake of any kind in the world.
The ascent of Ojos del Salado is mostly a hike except for the final section to the summit which is a difficult scramble that may require ropes. The first ascent was made in 1937 by Jan Alfred Szczepański and Justyn Wojsznis, members of a Polish expedition in the Andes.
Its name comes from the enormous deposits of salt that, in the form of lagoons or “eyes”, appear in its glaciers.[4]
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There is no doubt that Ojos del Salado is a recently active volcano, but the question of whether it should be considered currently (or "historically") active is arguable. According to the Smithsonian Institution's Global Volcanism Program,[2] the most recent known eruption was around 1300 years ago, with large error bars. However, there is also some evidence for a minor ash emission in 1993, which would definitely qualify the volcano as historically active. The presence of fumaroles high on the mountain and recent-looking lava flows, albeit of uncertain age, also argues in favor of a categorization as "active." By these definitions Ojos del Salado is the highest historically active volcano on earth. If the older date is accepted, the title of "highest historically active volcano" might reside instead with the somewhat lower Llullaillaco volcano, which certainly has erupted in historic times (most recently in 1877) and should still be considered active. Definitions of "active" being themselves controversial and somewhat arbitrary, the point is mainly of trivial interest.
The elevation of Ojos del Salado has been the subject of debate. Contrary to widely reproduced claims made by Argentine authorities in 1994, which still appear in some maps, publications and websites, Ojos del Salado is about 100 m (330 ft) higher than Argentina's nearby Monte Pissis (6,793 m).
An article in Andes magazine in 2006 offered that Ojos del Salado may be higher than Aconcagua, Argentina, although the argument was premised on older, less accurate altitude surveys. The results of these older surveys assigned Ojos del Salado an elevation of 7,057 metres (23,150 ft), which would have made it nearly 100 m (330 ft) higher than Aconcagua. In fact, as early as 1955, an estimate was made that the elevation of Ojos del Salado was 7,100 m (23,000 ft), but that was "simply an estimate based on the altitude of the final camp, and the hours of ascent to the summit."[5] In 1956 the first Chilean expedition led by the retired lieutenant René Fajardo measured the height of Ojos del Salado as 7,084 m with a pocket pressure altimeter. Apart from being an inexact method, the height shown be the altimeter was far too high as air pressure is generally lower in the afternoon, time at which expedition reached the summit.[6]
In 2007, a Chilean-European expedition performed a survey on both Ojos del Salado and Monte Pissis, using more accurate instruments. It found the former to be 6,891 m and the latter 6,793 m.[7] This is within recent handheld Global Positioning System (GPS) surveys, which have estimated the mountain to be between 6,880 and 6,910 m (22,570–22,670 ft),[8] although the vertical margin of margin of the Chilean-European expedition's equipment, 10 m,[7] leaves uncertainty as to the mountain's more precise altitude.
There are two summit peaks; one, which is slightly higher but by no more than a metre, is known as the "Chilean summit"; the other, which is more substantial, is known as the "Argentine summit". These are so named because they are usually climbed from the Chilean and Argentine sides respectively, although the international border passes over both peaks. There is a short distance but steep and dangerous drop between the two peaks, so it is unusual for climbers to reach them both.
On Saturday, April 21, 2007, Chileans Gonzalo Bravo G. and his co-driver, Eduardo Canales Moya, claimed to have broken the New High Altitude World Record aboard a vehicle on Ojos del Salado, reaching 6,688 m (21,942 ft) in altitude, claiming a new Guinness record for Chile, surpassing the mark imposed by a German expedition during the previous March. This record was duly certified by the Guinness World Record on July 2007.[9] The three previous Guinness records were achieved by German expeditions with stock vehicles in the same volcano, which, with larger budgets, had set the previous record of 6,646 m (21,804 ft).
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