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Mount Aconcagua, the highest mountain peak in the
Americas (Western Hemisphere) at 22 830 feet (6958
meters) above sea level, is visible near the center of
this low-oblique, northeast-looking photograph. Five
major snow-covered peaks with summits exceeding 20 000
feet (6100 meters) rise along the north-south axis of
the cohesive and massive structure of the Andes
Mountains through this area of Argentina and Chile.
Mount Aconcagua is the second snow-covered peak from
the north. The narrow east-west valley immediately
south of Mount Aconcagua contains a section of the Pan
American Highway that connects Mendoza, Argentina,
with Santiago, Chile. Mount Aconcagua and the
snowcapped volcanic peak north of Mount Aconcagua lie
within Argentina; the three snowcapped volcanic peaks
south of Mount Aconcagua lie directly on the
Chile-Argentina border. Several river basins are
discernible on the eastern side of the Andes Mountains
in west-central Argentina. Where sufficient water
exists, mainly from snowmelt from the Andes Mountains,
irrigated agriculture occurs in the otherwise dry
valleys and basins east of the high Andes Mountains.
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