Ausangate
Ausangate | |
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The western face of Ausangate Mountain | |
Highest point | |
Elevation | 6,384 m (20,945 ft) |
Coordinates | 13°47′19″S 71°13′52″W / 13.78861°S 71.23111°WCoordinates: 13°47′19″S 71°13′52″W / 13.78861°S 71.23111°W |
Geography | |
Ausangate Peru | |
Location | Cusco Region, Peru |
Parent range | Andes, Willkanuta mountain range |
Ausangate or Auzangate[1] (in hispanicized spellings) is a mountain of the Willkanuta mountain range in the Andes of Peru. With an elevation of 6,384 metres it is situated around 100 kilometres southeast of Cusco in the Cusco Region, Canchis Province, Pitumarca District, and in the Quispicanchi Province, Ocongate District.[1]
The mountain has significance in Incan mythology.
Every year the Quyllur Rit'i (Quechua for "star snow") festival which attracts thousands of Quechua pilgrims is celebrated about 20 km north of the Ausangate at the mountain Qullqipunku. It takes place one week before the Corpus Christi feast.
The region is inhabited by llama and alpaca herding communities, and constitutes one of the few remaining pastoralist societies in the world. High mountain trails are used by these herders to trade with agricultural communities at lower elevations. Currently, one of these trails, "the road of the Apu Ausangate", is one of the most renowned treks in Peru.
The area has four major geological features, the Andean uplift formed by Granits, the hanging glaciers and glacial erosional valleys, the Permian formation with its singular colors: red, ochre, and turquoise and the Cretaceous, limestone forests.
See also
Gallery
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Handicraft seller in Ausangate, near Jampa Pass
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Women of Ausangate, near Tinki village
References
External links
- Ausangate Trek reviews itinerary, pictures