2015.4.11
Christian Ostrosky
Puente del Inca: El Puente, Canon EOS 20D
"Puente del Inca, Spanish for "the Inca's Bridge", is a natural arch that forms a bridge over the Vacas River, a tributary of the Mendoza River. It is located in Mendoza Province, Argentina near Las Cuevas.
Puente del Inca is also the name of the nearby hot springs. Scientists speculate[1] that interaction of extreme elements like ice and hot springs was involved in the origin of the formation. They suppose that in ancient times ice covered the river and acted as support for avalanches of snow, dust and rocks. So the dust over the ice over the river would have served as a path for the sulfurous water and petrified the surface, so when the snow melted, the bridge remained by itself.
Charles Darwin was one of the visitors to this natural marvel, and made some drawings of the bridge with great stalactites.
In the early twentieth century there was a big Thermal Resort and Spa that used the hot springs to cure some illnesses. There was a train station that is still standing there, and tourists arrived by train to the resort. This was one of the last Argentine stations of the Transandine Railway before the train continued into Chile, traveling through a long tunnel under the Andes.
The abandoned train station has been turned into the Museo del Andinista. A group of fellow mountain climbers from province of Rosario, Argentina decided to open a public a space that is reflective of the Aconcagua mountain cultural history and current manifestations. The museum is open to the public during the summer and is ran by the founding group of friends."
Puente del Inca is also the name of the nearby hot springs. Scientists speculate[1] that interaction of extreme elements like ice and hot springs was involved in the origin of the formation. They suppose that in ancient times ice covered the river and acted as support for avalanches of snow, dust and rocks. So the dust over the ice over the river would have served as a path for the sulfurous water and petrified the surface, so when the snow melted, the bridge remained by itself.
Charles Darwin was one of the visitors to this natural marvel, and made some drawings of the bridge with great stalactites.
In the early twentieth century there was a big Thermal Resort and Spa that used the hot springs to cure some illnesses. There was a train station that is still standing there, and tourists arrived by train to the resort. This was one of the last Argentine stations of the Transandine Railway before the train continued into Chile, traveling through a long tunnel under the Andes.
The abandoned train station has been turned into the Museo del Andinista. A group of fellow mountain climbers from province of Rosario, Argentina decided to open a public a space that is reflective of the Aconcagua mountain cultural history and current manifestations. The museum is open to the public during the summer and is ran by the founding group of friends."