This shimmering white expanse could easily be mistaken for Antarctica. But what we"re looking at isn"t snow and ice—it"s a surreal landscape of endless salt high in the Andes of southwest Bolivia. Located at a lofty altitude of about 12,000 feet above sea level, Salar de Uyuni is the world"s largest salt flat (or salt pan), spanning just over 4,000 square miles. It was formed when prehistoric lakes dried up over centuries, leaving behind a desert of bright white salt that can be seen from space. During the rainy season (December to April), a thin layer of water covering the salt transforms the area into a giant mirror that reflects the beautiful Bolivian skies. If you"re driving across the surface at such times, it can appear as though you are navigating through a highway of clouds.
Salt of the earth
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Registan Square, Samarkand, Uzbekistan
-
Making it work—in Norway
-
A cliffside harbor in Sardinia
-
It’s National Walk to Work Day
-
World Migratory Bird Day
-
Point Reyes National Seashore in California
-
International Jazz Day
-
Unbearable cuteness
-
A horse of many colors
-
World Bicycle Day
-
Protecting Alaska
-
In praise of the pipes
-
Too awesome to be a planet
-
World Oceans Day
-
A dying breed of tree thrives in an American park
-
Hoodoos, Sunset Point, Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah
-
Splendid leaf frog
-
West Cornwall Covered Bridge, Connecticut
-
Arbor Day
-
Shhh, the movie is about to start
-
We re gonna need a bigger birdhouse
-
Sea Otter Awareness Week
-
Giant kelp in the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary
-
National Napping Day
-
European hedgehog
-
The circular castle of Cornwall
-
Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel and the Louvre Pyramid
-
Ancient art in the Amazon
-
World Art Day
-
Great horned owl fledglings
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

