Summary
The southern plains are the most barren of the three great tracts of American low lands ; they stretch from Terra del Fuego over 27 degrees of latitude, or 1900 miles, nearly to Tucuman and the mountains of Brazil. Palms grow at one end, deep snow covers the other many months in the year. This enormous plain, of 1,620,000 square miles begins on the eastern part of Terra del Fuego, which is a flat covered with trees, and therefore superior to its continuation on the continent through eastern Patagonia, which, for 800 miles from the land's end to beyond the Rio Colorado, is a desert of shingle. It is occasionally diversified by huge boulders, tufts of brown grass, low bushes armed with spines, brine lakes, incrustations of salt white as snow, and by black basaltic platforms, like plains of iron, at the foot of the Andes, barren as the rest. Eastern Patagonia, however, is not one universal flat, but a succession of shingly horizontal plains at higher and higher levels, separated by long lines of cliffs or escarpments, the gable ends of the tiers or plains. The ascent is small, for even at the foot of the Andes the highest of these platforms is only 3000 feet above the ocean. The plains are here and there intersected by a ravine or a stream, the waters of which do not fertilize the blighted soil.
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- Physical Geography , pp. 144 - 157Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1848