Talampaya National Park
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Talampaya National Park | |
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IUCN Category II (National Park) | |
Location: | La Rioja Province, Argentina |
Coordinates: | |
Area: | 2,150 km² |
Established: | 1997 |
Governing body: | Administración de Parques Nacionales |
Talampaya National Park is a national park located in the east/centre of La Rioja Province, Argentina. It was designated a provincial reserve in 1975 and in 1997 was declared a national park.
The park covers an area of 2,150 km², at an altitude of 1,500 m above mean sea level. Its purpose is to protect important archaeological and palaeontological sites found in the area. It has landscapes of great beauty, with flora and fauna typical of the mountain biome.
The park is in a basin between the Cerro Los Colorados to the west and the Sierra de Sañagasta to the east. The landscape is the result of erosion by water and wind in a desert climate, with large ranges in temperature - high heat by day and low temperature at night, with torrential rain in summer and strong wind in spring.
In the park can be found:
- The dry bed of the Talampaya River, where dinosaurs lived millions of years ago - fossils, whilst not as interesting as Ischigualasto, have been found here;
- The Talampaya gorge and its rock formations with walls up to 143 m high, narrowing to 80 m at one point;
- The remains of indigenous peoples' settlements, such as the petroglyphs of the Puerta del Cañón;
- A botanical garden of the local flora at the narrow point of the canyon;
- Regional fauna, including guanacos, hares, maras, foxes and condors.
In 2000, UNESCO declared the park a World Heritage Site.
[edit] External links
- Official park website
- Map, history and description
- Talampaya and Moon Valley area
- Pictures and history (Spanish)
National parks of Argentina (by region) |
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Northwest: Baritú | Calilegua | El Rey | Los Cardones | Campo de los Alisos | Chaqueña: Copo | Río Pilcomayo | Chaco | Mesopotamia: Iguazú* | Mburucuyá | El Palmar | Cuyo: San Guillermo | Talampaya* | El Leoncito | Sierra de las Quijadas | Pampas: Quebrada del Condorito | Lihué Calel | Predelta | Patagonia: Laguna Blanca | Lanín | Los Arrayanes | Nahuel Huapi | Lago Puelo | Los Alerces | Francisco P. Moreno | Los Glaciares* | Monte León | Tierra del Fuego |
Cueva de las Manos, Río Pinturas | Iguazú | Ischigualasto / Talampaya Natural Parks | Jesuit Block and Estancias of Córdoba | Guaraní Jesuit Missions: San Ignacio Miní, Santa Ana, Nuestra Señora de Loreto and Santa María Mayor (w/ Brazil) | Los Glaciares | Valdés Peninsula | Quebrada de Humahuaca