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The Andes Mountains terminate at the southern end of
Chile and Argentina in a jumble of islands and fjords.
This low-oblique, south-looking photograph shows the
fragmented landscape as the South American continent
gradually ends in Tierra del Fuego. Part of the Strait
of Magellan is barely visible near the horizon.
Numerous glacier lakes can be seen on either side of
the north-south axis of the ice- and snow-covered
Andes Mountains. The mountains gradually decrease in
elevation, from approximately 10 000 feet (3048
meters) in this photograph to 4000 feet (1220 meters)
and less above sea level near the horizon. Lake Viedma
(northernmost) and Lake Argentino the two larger light
blue lakes at the northern end of the photograph
constantly receive meltwater from the western
glaciers. The brownish-tan terrain east of the Andes
Mountains is a plateau where the constantly blowing
west wind, coupled with very limited precipitation,
produces a harsh, barren, almost nonvegetated
landscape in this Argentine region of Patagonia.
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