Salar Ignorado | |
Pushpin Map: | Chile |
Coordinates: | -25.4978°N -68.6214°W |
Salar Ignorado is a salar (salt flat) in the Andes of Chile's Atacama Region at elevation. Located just south of Cerro Bayo volcano, it comprises of salt flats, sand dunes and numerous pools of open water. The waters of Salar Ignorado, unlike these of other salt flats in the central Andes, are acidic owing to the input of sulfuric acid from hydrothermal water and the weathering of volcanic rocks.
The salt flat is located in a harsh climate with strong winds, large temperature fluctuations, intense insolation and aridity. Gypsum crystals develop in the pools of water and are redeposited by wind to form the dunes. Liquids and microorganisms are occasionally trapped within the crystals. The environment of Salar Ignorado has drawn comparisons to early Earth.
The salt pan is in the Chilean Andes, and, not far from the border with Argentina, within the northernmost tip of the Chilean Atacama Region. It is located east of Plato de Sopa volcano and just south of the high Cerro Bayo Complex volcano. Salar Gorbea is just northwest of Salar Ignorado. The area is difficult to access.
Salar Ignorado is triangular with a surface area of at elevation, and salt-free benches delimit its shores. The surface of the salt flat is not actually flat and features a hummocky topography with heights of . About one third is made up by pools of open water, the rest are sand dunes and salar flats. Pools are less than deep but reach widths of 2-. They form either when strong winds blow out part of the salar surface and the shallow groundwater floods the resulting depressions, or from the ongoing dissolution of salts in the salt-undersaturated brines below. Crystals of gypsum grow in the pools, forming sea urchin-like shapes and mounds. Part of the groundwater reaches the surface and evaporates, leaving small gypsum crystals behind that are reworked by winds and form the dunes. They also form snow-like surface deposits around the margins of the pools. There is no evidence of former shorelines around Salar Ignorado. Only one inflow was identified during reconnaissance reported in 2002 and leads to a small lagoon at the northern end of Salar Ignorado. A dry channel runs from Salar Ignorado to Salar Gorbea, through which Salar Ignorado may have spilled into Salar Gorbea in the past. Otherwise, both Salar Ignorado and Salar Gorbea are closed basins.
The catchment of Salar Ignorado has a surface area of about and is devoid of vegetation, with a maximum elevation of about . It consists of heavily eroded and hydrothermally altered Miocene volcanoes that formed on a Paleozoic basement. The volcanoes feature large deposits of hydrothermally altered rock and native sulfur. The landscape is dominated by hills and mountains, and volcanic sediments with grain sizes ranging from boulders to sand cover the terrain surrounding Salar Ignorado.
Water temperatures in the salar pools range from 9-. The waters contain sodium and sulfate as their main salt components, with salt concentrations ranging between . Salar Ignorado is one of the rare salars with acidic waters in northern Chile and Bolivia, with its neighbour Salar de Gorbea the only other one there. The waters of Salar Ignorado are unsuitable for irrigation or drinking water use.
The most common mineral deposited at Salar Ignorado is gypsum, but bassanite, epsomite, halite, jarosite and thenardite also occur. The gypsum crystals contain fluid inclusions that often have a complex history and contain bubbles. Large gypsum crystals are cemented by smaller crystals. Groundwater precipitates minerals like alunite, hematite, jarosite and kaolinite.
The acidity is unusual for salars in Chile and there is no obvious reason for it in the geology of the area. It appears to originate from hydrothermal and magmatic processes that generate sulfuric acid and consume the rocks' buffering capacity. Sulfur and iron oxidation gives rise to acids that in turn leach mineral components of rocks. Most of the water likewise is of hydrothermal and magmatic origin while direct precipitation plays a minor role. It is possible that Salar Ignorado and Gorbea were normal salars before hydrothermal alteration of the surrounding volcanoes set in. The inflow of Salar Ignorado is the most sulfate-rich of all studied Andean salars. A peak of solute input to Salar Ignorado took place between 120,000 and 11,000 years ago during the Pleistocene, during a humid period. Volcanic uplift occurs in the region at a rate of 2.5cm/year; fluctuations in the regional magmatic system may have triggered intrusions of groundwater into the salar but these events have not been dated.
Mean temperatures are about but fluctuations of 1- were documented in summer months. Mean precipitation is about per year and evaporation reaches per year. The region is one of the driest on Earth and has a harsh climate with strong winds, dust devils and high insolation. This climate may have persisted since the Miocene or even Eocene and prevents the formation of glaciers and visible surface flow.
Diatoms, green algae such as Dunaliella and prokaryotes live inside the gypsum crystals, with cells both within the solid crystals and the fluid inclusions. Microbial mats grow on the bottom of shallow pools. The bacterial species variety of Salar Ignorado and the bacterial biomass are small. Ecosystems at Salar Ignorado may resemble these of early Earth.
There is no evidence of crustaceans at Salar Ignorado. Only one mammal was observed in the area during a reconnaissance reported in 2013, and a vicuña skeleton was reported in 2008.