TRAVEL AND TOURS
San Pedro de Atacama refreshes one like a cool wind, blowing in the burning sun of a very dry desert. This is a quiet historical and cultural town set peacefully in the midst of a changing geography. It has enormous sandy areas, vast salt flats, pretty little valleys and snow-capped volcanoes almost six thousand meters tall.
Since 1980 it is known as "Chile's Archaeological Capital" and "Typical Zone". The desert town (103 kilometers from Calama and 2,438 meters above sea level) traces its origin back 11,000 years when primitive settlers moved into the Hoya del Loa and the oasis that relieve Atacama's thirst, turning this into Chile's first sedentary population.
From the Inca times the social organization of the population into ayllus (family groupings with the "you scratch my back and I'll scratch yours" philosophy), still subsists with the agricultural terraces terraces "carved" out of the hillsides to develop early agriculture, the pukaras (fortress-like structures built in the 12th century), the village of Tulor that lies half buried under sand drifts, and the ancient towns like Peine, Socaire and Toconao.
On these historical sands, the Incas built the Catarpe Administrative Center in 1450, while the Spaniards, headed by Diego de Almagro and Pedro de Valdivia, conquered the area between 1536 and 1540, renaming it as Atacama la Grande. Later would come the colonial churches, where to this day God is worshipped.
The traces of this past of struggle and tenacity in the parching desert environment can be followed in the Padre Le Paige Archaeological Museum, of modern creation, with 450,000 archaeological items showing the development of Atacama culture. This is located in the peaceful rural village of San Pedro de Atacama, inhabited by only 500 inhabitants.
From the museum to the church of
San Pedro de Atacama. The full circle, closing in the doorway and belfry of the region's most attractive and important church which, thanks to its -practically celestial- architectural beauty, has been declared a National Monument.
However, here at San Pedro de Atacama, human creations are simply a finishing touch, a mere addition to the magnificent works of nature: the severe cadence of desert dunes in areas that have never seen a drop of rain; the unpolluted whiteness of Chile's greatest salt flats; and the stylized grace of the flamingoes and guallatas that stalk the lakes.
And nature seems irritated at times, fuming repeatedly in the amazing geysers of Tatio, natural chimneys rising to 7 meters height; and, at times, it seems whimsical and fantastic in the mysterious Valley of the Moon, a strangely contorted landscape.
San Pedro de Atacama: desert, parched earth, sandy wastes that transform into cozy company in a town with cobbled roads and adobe buildings. Here one finds magic and enchantment, heat and delirium, perhaps even mirages. Here there are salty plains, lakes and even a moonscape … but no rain. Something had to be missing. Nothing is ever perfect.