- Laguna Palcacocha
Infobox lake
lake_name = Laguna Palcacocha
image_lake = Lago Palcacocha 2002.jpg
caption_lake = 2002
image_bathymetry =
caption_bathymetry =
location =Ancash Region
coords = coord|9|23|49|S|77|22|47|W|type:waterbody_region:PE|display=inline,title
type =
inflow =
outflow =
catchment =
basin_countries = Peru
length =
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depth =
max-depth =
volume =
residence_time =
shore =
elevation = 4,566 m
islands =
cities =Laguna Palcacocha (
Quechua "palka"=valley "qucha"=lake) is aglacier lake in theAndes -Cordillera ofSouth America in northwesternPeru .Location
Laguna Palcococha is located at coord|9|23|49|S|77|22|47|W|type:waterbody_region:PE in the
Ancash Region inCordillera Blanca at an elevation of 4,566 m, just belowPalcaraju (6,274 m) andPucaranca (6,156 m) summits. The lake is one of several lakes supplying the town ofHuaraz with water, 23 km to the southwest.Flood Disaster 1941
On the early morning of
13 December 1941 a huge chunk of the adjacent glacier fell into Lake Palcacocha, causing the breaking of themoraine walls that limit the lake downhill.The wave hurtled down the Cojup Valley, destroying another lake on its way (Laguna Jiracocha) and carrying blocks of ice, large rock boulders and liquid mud towards theRío Santa valley.Within 15 minutes the mudslide reached Huarez, with 400 m³ of debris burying parts of the town and killing approximately 6-7,000 inhabitants.Disaster Warning 2003
In April
2003 ,NASA scientists discovered a fissure in the glacier above Lago Palcacocha on Terra satellite images of November2001 . Their warnings reached Peru just two weeks afterUGRH (Unidad de Glaciologia y Recursos Hidricos) staff had done some field mapping of Laguna Palcacocha, where a moraine rupture had caused a minor flood from the lake on19 March 2003 which the safety constructions from the 1940s had captured.According to research done by scientists of the
Innsbruck university inAustria , the ensuing panic among the inhabitants and economic damage to Huarez' tourism industry could have been prevented, as from their findings the NASA warnings were a misinterpretation of satellite data.As the glaciers in this part of the
Cordillera Blanca as well as elsewhere have been declining and thinning up because of global climatic changes, there is no actual danger for Huarez in the foreseeable future.External links
* [http://geowww.uibk.ac.at/glacio/huaraz A potential disaster in the icy Andes: a regrettable blunder - Georg Kaser, Christian Georges]
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