Lakes of South America
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Most of South America’s important lakes are confined to the Andes or their foothills. Because of the chain’s complex topography, water has accumulated in closed basins to form natural reservoirs. Among permanent Andean lakes, the largest is Lake Titicaca, which lies at an elevation of some 12,500 feet (3,810 metres) between Peru and Bolivia. The lake is 120 miles (190 km) long and up to 50 miles (80 km) wide, although it was much more extensive in the past. Lake Junín in central Peru; Lake Sarococha, also in Peru, between Puno and Arequipa; and Lake Poopó in Bolivia also rank among the larger Andean lakes. They exhibit uniform physical conditions throughout the year, in terms of temperature and percentage of dissolved gases. In addition, they remain ice-free up to an elevation of about 16,000 feet (4,900 metres), and, as a result, the climate of their shores is temperate.
Piedmont lakes are found in Patagonia where, in the wake of melting glaciers, lakes formed downslope in natural basins. Among those are Lakes Buenos Aires, Argentino, and Nahuel Huapí. Their eastern parts, which stretch to the end of the Argentine plateau, generally have gently sloping banks bordered by low mountains, while their western parts form a series of narrow, fjordlike arms that lie between steep slopes. Bodies of water such as Lake Maracaibo in Venezuela and Dos Patos Lagoon in southern Brazil, both located on coasts, formed when longshore drifts sealed the exits to the sea.
Marshes and swamps
Vast marshes are found in poorly drained depressions in many parts of the continent. One of the widest marshy areas is the Pantanal, in the middle course of the Paraguay River; it is subject to flooding in December, reaching its highest watermark in June, when it becomes an immense swamp. Swamps of another type occur in the rainforests, mostly in the Amazon basin and in northwestern Colombia. In some places the ground is inundated throughout the year, whereas in other areas swampy conditions occur only at the time of the annual flood, as is the case with the annually flooded plains known as várzeas. Finally, wide, marshy areas border the mouths of the Orinoco and Amazon rivers, and mangrove swamps of various types are found along the lower river valleys and coasts from southern Ecuador northward, less continuously along the Caribbean coast, and south along the Atlantic coast to southeastern Brazil.
Soils
More than 20 distinct soil regions can be found on the South American continent as a result of its geologic history, topography, climate, and vegetation. Three major groupings correspond to the continent’s three primary land regions—the lowlands, the highlands, and the Andes.
Low natural fertility is a conspicuous feature of soils in the humid tropic regions of South America. About half of the continent’s soils consist either of unconsolidated and nutrient-poor sediments (e.g., kaolins [china clays] and quartz sands) deposited in river basins, latosols (red soils leached of silica and containing residual concentrations of iron and aluminum sesquioxides), red-yellow podzols (acidic soils with a bleached upper horizon, or layer, that are low in lime), and regosols (azonal soils consisting mainly of imperfectly consolidated material and having a complex morphology). About one-fifth of the continent is covered by arid soils of various types in which agriculture is risky without irrigation. Other regions, representing about 10 percent of the total area, are poorly drained, the soils being either gleys (clayey soils in which the substrate is bluish gray, generally sticky, and often structureless because of excessive moisture), groundwater laterites, grumosols (soils with a high content of expanding clays), or planosols (a type of soil found in humid climates in which soluble salts and minerals are leached out of the upper layers and are cemented or compacted at a lower level). In the Andes, slopes are often steep, and lithosols (shallow soils consisting of imperfectly weathered rock fragments) abound, accounting for another 10 percent of the continent’s surface. In the inter-Andean valleys and on some of the foothills, nevertheless, eutrophic soils (deposited by lakes, and containing much nutrient matter, but often shallow and subject to seasonal oxygen deficiency) can be found.
Fertile soils, therefore, extend over only about 10 percent of the surface of South America. The most important of those are brunizems (deep, dark-coloured prairie soils, developed from wind-deposited loess), chestnut soils, and ferruginous tropical soils. On the low coastal ranges, in the foothills of the western Andes, and on the nearby plains and terraces of Colombia and Ecuador, the soils consist mainly of red-yellow latosols, podzols, and alluvial soils. Soils in southern Brazil and Uruguay consist of brunizems, reddish prairie soils, and planosols. The Argentine Pampas, the largest fertile area on the continent, is uniformly covered with the so-called pampean loess, which is calcareous, rich in minerals, and mixed with volcanic sediment. Less rich soils are found in the uplands of northeastern and central Brazil, consisting mainly of sandy regosols in the north and red latosols in the south.
The agricultural development of South America closely reflects the distribution of soils according to their fertility. It is mostly confined to the eastern mid-latitude plains, in which is concentrated the production of cereal grains and cattle grazing; to the subtropical and temperate parts of the Andes, from Colombia to Chile, where grazing takes place and a variety of crops are cultivated; and to eastern and southeastern Brazil, where coffee, cacao, soybeans, and sugarcane are grown, while the interior plateaus are devoted to cattle grazing.
Soil erosion has ravaged a large part of the continent. According to some estimates, in several countries half or more of the presently arable land has been severely damaged or ruined by poor land management. In the Andes, land that once produced high yields of wheat is now abandoned. Mountain forests are still cleared for cattle grazing and cultivation, which greatly accelerates erosion and ruins the soil of the region for years thereafter. Soil damage has been less severe in areas of relatively flat terrain. Campaigns for soil conservation or restoration have been implemented in most countries.
Climate
South America extends over a wide latitudinal range, thus encompassing a great variety of climates. South America’s broadest extent is in the equatorial zone, so that tropical conditions prevail over more than half of the continent. Elevation, particularly in the Andes, is another important climatic control.