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Del Desierto Lake

Coordinates: 49°02′13″S 72°51′49″W / 49.03694°S 72.86361°W / -49.03694; -72.86361 (Laguna del Desierto)
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Del Desierto Lake
Del Desierto Lake, discovered in 1921 by the Chilean Vicente Ovando Vargas and baptized by Ismael Sepúlveda Rivas
Del Desierto Lake is located in Santa Cruz Province
Del Desierto Lake
Del Desierto Lake
Location in Santa Cruz Province, Argentina
Del Desierto Lake is located in Argentina
Del Desierto Lake
Del Desierto Lake
Location in Argentina
LocationLago Argentino Department, Santa Cruz Province
Coordinates49°02′13″S 72°51′49″W / 49.03694°S 72.86361°W / -49.03694; -72.86361 (Laguna del Desierto)
Primary inflowsDiablo River
Primary outflowsLas Vueltas River
Basin countriesArgentina
Surface elevation506 metres (1,660 ft)

Del Desierto Lake or Lake of the Desert (called Lago del Desierto in Argentina and Laguna del Desierto in Chile) is a natural lake located in the Lago Argentino Department, Santa Cruz Province, Argentina. Located near Monte Fitz Roy and the O'Higgins/San Martín Lake, Lago del Desierto was for many decades the subject of a territorial dispute between Argentina and Chile, escalating to a small firefight on 6 November 1965 when 40 to 90 members of the Argentine Gendarmerie fought against four Chilean Carabineros, of which a lieutenant was killed and a sergeant was injured. The dispute was resolved favourably for Argentina in 1994 by international arbitration.[1][2]

Geography

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Del Desierto Lake, with Mount Fitz Roy in the background

Lago del Desierto (Spanish for "Lake of the Desert") is located within a glacial valley at 49°02′13″S 72°51′49″W / 49.03694°S 72.86361°W / -49.03694; -72.86361 (Laguna del Desierto), north and east of the Southern Patagonian Ice Field (Spanish Campo de Hielo Patagónico Sur). At the southern end, the body of water is accessible by dirt road from El Chaltén. From the northern Chilean end, nails hard travellers can walk or run from the Candelario Mancilla Border Crossing (approximately 30 km south of Villa O'Higgins) [citation needed] and down through the magical trail in the woods. Horses may be used to ferry heavy goods through this section if they can be found. The valley is located between the Martínez de Rozas Range on the east and the eastern edge of the Southern Patagonian Ice Field on the west. The lake collects the waters of many rivers and glaciers draining from the range, which eventually flow through the lake's outlet into the de las Vueltas River on the south side, proceeding to the Viedma Lake and ultimately to the Atlantic Ocean.

History

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In 1921, Chilean people became the first to settle permanently in the area, and two years later, Chilean settlers and explorers discovered the lake. Chilean settler Vicente Ovando Vargas[3] began settling in the southern sector of the territory in association with the Scotsman Donald Mc Cloud, who exploited lands neighboring the Laguna del Cóndor. In the 1930s, Father Alberto María de Agostini pointed out the settlement on the northern shore to the Chilean Ismael Sepúlveda and his wife Sara Cárdenas Torres.[4] In 1935, Héctor Puchi, an official of the Magallanes Land Office, visited the area and gave provisional title to Sepúlveda. Explorers F. Reichert and Ilse Von Renzel stayed with the Mansilla family in 1932. The Chilean government granted other land titles in 1934 and 1937.[5]

Dispute

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A map showing the territorial dispute between Chile and Argentina

After settlement, the area between landmark 62 on the southern shore of Lake O'Higgins/San Martín and Mount Fitz Roy, where Lago del Desierto is located, quickly became the subject of a border conflict between Chile and Argentina due to poor geographic information about the area when the 1881 Treaty was signed between Argentina and Chile.

Chilean Carabineros Lieutenant Hernán Merino Correa

This conflict climaxed with the death of Chilean Lieutenant Hernán Merino in combat with the Argentine National Gendarmerie on November 6, 1965.[5][6] The dispute was resolved on October 21, 1994, by the decision of an arbitration tribunal, which ruled in favor of Argentina in an area of 481 square kilometres (186 sq mi) that was in dispute. The decision was validated on October 13, 1995, when the same tribunal rejected Chile's request for reconsideration.[7]

After the resolution of the dispute, the name Laguna del Desierto continued to be used in Chile, although in Argentina the name Lago del Desierto was consolidated.

The northern end of the lake, Punta Norte de Laguna del Desierto, is the location of the Argentinian border crossing on the route between El Chaltén in Argentina and Villa O'Higgins in Chile, via the Chilean border crossing at Candelario Mancilla. This route can be completed through a combination of hiking and ferry transfers. Trekkers should ensure they get their passport stamped on crossing the border. Photography and drone use are prohibited in the area surrounding the border post.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "The Laguna del Desierto case". Jusmundi. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  2. ^ "Boundary dispute between Argentina and Chile concerning the frontier line between boundary post 62 and Mount Fitzroy" (PDF). Legal UN. 21 October 1994. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  3. ^ Hugo Ortiz de Filippi (April 9, 1991). "PROBLEMA LIMÍTROFE CON ARGENTINA EN LAGUNA DEL DESIERTO. OFICIOS". Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional. Retrieved 9 September 2022.
  4. ^ Alberto María de Agostini (1937). Andes Patagónicos.
  5. ^ a b René Peri Fagerström (1994). A la sombra del Monte Fitz Roy. Salón Teniente Merino.
  6. ^ Stenger Larenas, Iván (1998). Teniente Merino: Héroe Nacional de la Soberanía. Carabineros' Printing.
  7. ^ René Peri Fagerström (1994). ¿La geografía derrotada?: el arbitraje de Laguna del Desierto, Campos de Hielo patagónico sur. SERSICOM F&E Ltda.