


A red desert plain abuts a colorful “quebrada” — a rugged, cliffy outcrop — near Llullaillaco National Park in Chile. Meaning “breaks” in Spanish, quebradas are common formations in this region, which is primarily a desert and devoid of vegetation. Despite its lack of rainfall, the area is a habitat for vicuñas, wild ancestors of the alpaca.
See more here: https://bit.ly/3IQmQVa
-24.930723°, -69.485001°
Source imagery: Maxar
mattsmithrockstheworld reblogged this from blossomsinthemist
arminan liked this
blossomsinthemist reblogged this from dailyoverview
blossomsinthemist liked this
thehiddenbaroness reblogged this from lastoftheptolemies
stuckonquiraing reblogged this from entomologize-nonbug
shawn-man-x liked this
omniasvntcommvnia reblogged this from whenimreallyathundacat
happy-hudson liked this
pillbug-in-a-jar reblogged this from tooies
gigglehue liked this
thelovesonglovesong liked this
mouseman-deactivated20349710 reblogged this from asexualzoro
wizardpicsinyou liked this
arorgripi reblogged this from areus-in-a-little-cave
arorgripi liked this
marbearmarigold liked this
theresa1441 reblogged this from actuallyapathy