fbpx
Wikipedia

Lake Atitlán

Lake Atitlán (Spanish: Lago de Atitlán, [atiˈtlan]) is a lake in the Guatemalan Highlands of the Sierra Madre mountain range. The lake is located in the Sololá Department of southwestern Guatemala. It is known as the deepest lake in Central America.

Lake Atitlán
Seen from the Space Shuttle. Volcán San Pedro is at the left of the image; Panajachel is the largest white patch along the upper right shore. North is to the top of the image.
Lake Atitlán
LocationSololá Department
Coordinates14°42′N 91°12′W / 14.700°N 91.200°W / 14.700; -91.200Coordinates: 14°42′N 91°12′W / 14.700°N 91.200°W / 14.700; -91.200
TypeCrater lake, endorheic
Basin countriesGuatemala
Surface area130.1 km2 (50.2 sq mi)[1]
Max. depth340 m (1,120 ft) (est.)
Water volume20 km3 (16,000,000 acre⋅ft)
Surface elevation1,562 m (5,125 ft)
References[1]

Name

Atitlán means "between the waters". In the Nahuatl language, "atl" is the word for water,[2] and "titlan" means between.[3] The "tl" at the end of the word "atl" is dropped (because it is a grammatical suffix) and the words are combined to form "Atitlán".

Geography

The lake has a maximum depth of about 340 metres (1,120 ft)[1] and an average depth of 220 metres (720 ft).[4] Its surface area is 130.1 km2 (50.2 sq mi).[1] It is approximately 18 km × 8 km (11.2 mi × 5.0 mi) with around 20 km3 (4.8 cu mi) of water. Atitlán is technically an endorheic lake, feeding from two nearby rivers and not draining into the ocean. It is shaped by deep surrounding escarpments and three volcanoes on its southern flank. The lake basin is volcanic in origin, filling an enormous caldera formed by a supervolcanic eruption 84,000 years ago. The culture of the towns and villages surrounding Lake Atitlán is influenced by the Maya people. The lake is about 50 kilometres (31 mi) west-northwest of Antigua. It should not be confused with the smaller Lake Amatitlán.

Lake Atitlán is renowned as one of the most beautiful lakes in the world, and is one of Guatemala's most important national and international tourist attractions.[4] German explorer and naturalist Alexander von Humboldt called it "the most beautiful lake in the world,"[5] and Aldous Huxley famously wrote of it in his 1934 travel book Beyond the Mexique Bay: "Lake Como, it seems to me, touches on the limit of permissibly picturesque, but Atitlán is Como with additional embellishments of several immense volcanoes. It really is too much of a good thing."[6]

The area around San Marcos has particularly tall cliffs abutting the lake and in recent years has become renowned for cliff diving.[7]

Agriculture

The area supports extensive coffee and avocado orchards and a variety of farm crops, most notably corn and onions. Significant agricultural crops include: corn, onions, beans, squash, tomatoes, cucumbers, garlic, chile verde, strawberries and pitahaya fruit. The lake itself is a significant food source for the largely indigenous population.

Geological history

 
A view across Lake Atitlán from Panajachel to Volcán San Pedro
 
Panorama view of the lake as seen from the top of Volcán San Pedro, or from the top towards the bottom of the satellite photo on the top of this page

The first volcanic activity in the region occurred about 11 million years ago, and since then the region has seen four separate episodes of volcanic growth and caldera collapse, the most recent of which began about 1.8 million years ago and culminated in the formation of the present caldera. The lake now fills a large part of the caldera, reaching depths of up to 340 m (1,120 ft).

The caldera-forming eruption is known as Los Chocoyos eruption and ejected up to 300 km3 (72 cu mi) of tephra. The enormous eruption dispersed ash over an area of some 6,000,000 square kilometres (2,300,000 sq mi): it has been detected from Florida to Ecuador, and can be used as a stratigraphic marker in both the Pacific and Atlantic oceans (known as Y-8 ash in marine deposits).[8] A chocoyo is a type of bird which is often found nesting in the relatively soft ash layer.

Since the end of Los Chocoyos, continuing volcanic activity has built three volcanoes in the caldera. Volcán Atitlán lies on the southern rim of the caldera, while Volcán San Pedro and Volcán Tolimán lie within the caldera. San Pedro is the oldest of the three and seems to have stopped erupting about 40,000 years ago. Tolimán began growing after San Pedro stopped erupting and probably remains active, although it has not erupted in historic times. Atitlán has developed almost entirely in the last 10,000 years and remains active, its most recent eruption having occurred in 1853.

On February 4, 1976, a very large earthquake (magnitude 7.5) struck Guatemala, killing more than 26,000 people. The earthquake fractured the lake bed and caused subsurface drainage from the lake, allowing the water level to drop two metres (6 ft 7 in) within one month.[9][10]

Ecological history

In 1955, the area around Lake Atitlán became a national park. The lake was mostly unknown to the rest of the world, and Guatemala was seeking ways to increase tourism and boost the local economy. It was suggested by Pan American World Airways that stocking the lake with a fish prized by anglers would be a way to do just that.[11] As a result, an exotic non-native species, the black bass, was introduced into the lake in 1958. The bass quickly took to its new home and caused a radical change in the species composition of the lake. The predatory bass caused the elimination of more than two-thirds of the native fish species in the lake and contributed to the extinction of the Atitlan grebe, a rare bird that lived only in the vicinity of Lake Atitlán.[12]

A unique aspect of the climate is what is referred to as Xocomil (of the Kaqchickel language meaning "the wind that carried away sin"). This wind is common late morning and afternoon across the lake; it is said to be the encounter of warm winds from Pacific meeting colder winds from the North.

In August 2015 a thick bloom of algae known as Microcystis cyanobacteria re-appeared in Lake Atitlan; the first major occurrence was in 2009. Bureaucratic red tape has been blamed for the lack of action to save the lake. If current activities continue unchecked, the toxification of the lake will make it unsuitable for human use.[13]

Culture

 
San Pedro la Laguna and Volcán San Pedro

The lake is surrounded by many villages in which Maya culture is still prevalent and traditional dress is worn. The Maya people of Atitlán are predominantly Tz'utujil and Kaqchikel. During the Spanish conquest of the Americas, the Kaqchikel initially allied themselves with the invaders to defeat their historic enemies, the Tz'utujil and K'iche' Maya, but were themselves conquered and subdued when they refused to pay tribute to the Spanish.

Santiago Atitlán is the largest of the lakeside communities, and it is noted for its worship of Maximón, an idol formed by the fusion of traditional Mayan deities, Catholic saints, and conquistador legends. The institutionalized effigy of Maximón is under the control of a local religious brotherhood and resides in various houses of its membership during the course of a year, being most ceremonially moved in a grand procession during Semana Santa. Several towns in Guatemala have similar cults, most notably the cult of San Simón in Zunil.

 
View from Hotel Atitlán near Panajachel

While Maya culture is predominant in most lakeside communities, Panajachel has been overwhelmed over the years by Guatemalan and foreign tourists. It attracted many hippies in the 1960s, and although the civil war caused many foreigners to leave, the end of hostilities in 1996 saw visitor numbers boom again, and the town's economy is almost entirely reliant on tourism today.

Several Mayan archeological sites have been found at the lake. Sambaj, located approximately 55 feet below the current lake level, appears to be from at least the pre-classic period.[14] There are remains of multiple groups of buildings, including one particular group of large buildings that are believed to have been the city center.[15]

A second site, Chiutinamit, where the remains of a city were found, was discovered by local fishermen who "noticed what appeared to be a city underwater".[16] During subsequent investigations, pottery shards were recovered from the site by divers, which enabled the dating of the site to the late pre-classic period (300 B.C. – 300 A.D.),[17] more specifically 250 AD.[18]

A project titled "Underwater archeology in the Lake Atitlán. Sambaj 2003 Guatemala" was recently approved by the Government of Guatemala in cooperation with Fundación Albenga and the Lake Museum in Atitlán. Because of the concerns of a private organization as is the Lake Museum in Atitlán the need to start the exploration of the inland waters in Guatemala was analyzed.[19]

 
Map of Lake Atitlán

There is no road that circles the lake. Communities are reached by boat or roads from the mountains that may have brief extensions along the shore. Jaibalito can only be reached by boat. Santa Catarina Palopó and San Antonio Palopó are linked by road to Panajachel. Main places otherwise are Santa Clara La Laguna, San Juan La Laguna, and San Pedro La Laguna in the west; Santiago Atitlán in the south; Cerro de Oro in the southeast; and San Lucas Tolimán in the east.

Recent studies indicate that a ceremonial site named Samabaj was located on an island about 500 metres (1,600 ft) long in Lake Atitlán. The site was revered for its striking connection to the Popol Wuj of the K'iche' Mayan peoples.[citation needed]

 
Lake Atitlán, from Tzam Poc Hotel near Santa Catarina Palopó

Guatemalan civil war

 
Aerial panoramic view of Lake Atitlán

"During the Guatemalan Civil War (1960 - 1996), the lake was the scene of many terrible human rights abuses, as the government pursued a scorched earth policy."[citation needed] Indigenous people were assumed to be universally supportive of the guerrillas who were fighting against the government, and were targeted for brutal reprisals. At least 300 Maya from Santiago Atitlán are believed to have disappeared during the conflict.

Two events of this era made international news. One was the assassination of Stanley Rother, a missionary from Oklahoma, in the church at Santiago Atitlán in 1981.[20] In 1990, a spontaneous protest march to the army base on the edge of town was met by gunfire, resulting in the death of 11 unarmed civilians.[21] International pressure forced the Guatemalan government to close the base and declare Santiago Atitlán a "military-free zone". The memorial commemorating the massacre was damaged in the 2005 mudslide.

Hurricane

Torrential rains from Hurricane Stan caused extensive damage throughout Guatemala in early October 2005, particularly around Lake Atitlán. A massive landslide buried the lakeside village of Panabaj, causing the death of as many as 1,400 residents, leaving 5,000 homeless, and many bodies buried under tonnes of earth. Following this event, Diego Esquina Mendoza, the mayor of Santiago Atitlán, declared the community a mass gravesite: "Those buried by the mudslide may never be rescued. Here they will stay buried, under five meters of mud. Panabáj is now a cemetery."[22]

Four and a half years after Hurricane Stan, Tropical Storm Agatha dropped even more rainfall causing extensive damages to the region[23] resulting in dozens of deaths between San Lucas Tolimán and San Antonio Palopó. Since then roads have been reopened and travel to the region has returned to normal.

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d INSIVUMEH (2008). "Indice de lagos" (in Spanish).
  2. ^ "atl - Wiktionary". en.wiktionary.org. Retrieved 2018-08-17.
  3. ^ "-titlan - Wikcionario". es.wiktionary.org (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-08-17.
  4. ^ a b "Atitlan, Lago Profile". LakeNet. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  5. ^ Morgan Szybist, Richard (2004). The Lake Atitlan Reference Guide: The Definitive Eco-Cultural Guidebook on Lake Atitlan. Adventures in Education, Inc.
  6. ^ Fieser, Ezra (November 29, 2009). "How Guatemala's Most Beautiful Lake Turned Ugly". Time. Retrieved 2021-07-18.
  7. ^ "Lake Atitlan, Guatemala". The Travelers Within. Retrieved 2020-07-10.
  8. ^ Rose, William I.; et al. (1987). "Quaternary silicic pyroclastic deposits of Atitlán Caldera, Guatemala". Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research. 33 (1–3): 57–80. Bibcode:1987JVGR...33...57R. doi:10.1016/0377-0273(87)90054-0.
  9. ^ "Guatemala Volcanoes and Volcanics". USGS – CVO. Retrieved 2010-03-13.
  10. ^ Newhall, C.G.; Paull, C.K.; Bradbury, J.P.; Higuera-Gundy, A.; Poppe, L.J.; Self, S.; Bonar Sharpless, N.; Ziagos, J. (August 1987). "Recent geologic history of lake Atitlán, a caldera lake in western Guatemala". Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research. 33 (1–3): 81–107. Bibcode:1987JVGR...33...81N. doi:10.1016/0377-0273(87)90055-2.
  11. ^ "Bad-Ass Bass Rain from the Sky – Revue Magazine".
  12. ^ "Bad-Ass Bass Rain from the Sky - Revue Magazine". revuemag.com. 29 August 2011. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  13. ^ "Toxic Algae Invade Guatemala's Treasured Lake Atitlan". ens-newswire.com. 20 August 2015.
  14. ^ Henry Benítez and Roberto Samayoa, "Samabaj y la arqueología subacuática en el Lago de Atitlán," in XIII Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala, 1999 (Guatemala: Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología, 2000), 2:849–54.
  15. ^ Sorenson, John L., (2002) The Submergence of the City of Jerusalem in the Land of Nephi, Provo, Utah: Maxwell Institute, 2002. P. N/A
  16. ^ Lund, John L. (2007), Mesoamerica and the Book of Mormon: Is this the Place, p. 61
  17. ^ Allen, Joseph (2003), Sacred Sites, p. 34
  18. ^ "Divers probe Mayan ruins submerged in Guatemala lake". Reuters. 30 October 2009. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  19. ^ http://www.unesco.org.cu/SitioSubacuatico/english/06_monica_valentini.htm[permanent dead link]
  20. ^ . Archdiocese of Oklahoma City. Archived from the original on 24 October 2015. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  21. ^ "Guatemala Troops Said to Kill 11 Protesting Raid". The New York Times. 3 December 1990. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  22. ^ "Hurricane Stan and Social Suffering in Guatemala". David Rockefeller Center Harvard.edu. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  23. ^ . May 2010. p. 6. Archived from the original on 2010-06-07. and the effects of Tropical Storm Agatha

Further reading

  • Morgan Szybist, Richard (2004), The Lake Atitlan Reference Guide: The Definitive Eco-Cultural Guidebook on Lake Atitlan, Adventures in Education, Inc.
  • Newhall, Christopher G., Dzurisin, Daniel (1988); Historical unrest at large calderas of the world, USGS Bulletin 1855, p. 1108
  • Vallance J.W., Calvert A.T. (2003), Volcanism during the past 84 ka at Atitlan caldera, Guatemala, American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2003
  • Kingery, Dennis (2003), , National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science
  • Maudslay, Alfred Percival; Maudslay, Anne Cary (1899). A glimpse at Guatemala, and some notes on the ancient monuments of Central America (PDF). London, UK: John Murray.

External links

  • AMSCLAE Authority Lake Atitlan
  • Volcano World Information

lake, atitlán, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, october, 201. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lake Atitlan news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Lake Atitlan Spanish Lago de Atitlan atiˈtlan is a lake in the Guatemalan Highlands of the Sierra Madre mountain range The lake is located in the Solola Department of southwestern Guatemala It is known as the deepest lake in Central America Lake AtitlanSeen from the Space Shuttle Volcan San Pedro is at the left of the image Panajachel is the largest white patch along the upper right shore North is to the top of the image Lake AtitlanLocationSolola DepartmentCoordinates14 42 N 91 12 W 14 700 N 91 200 W 14 700 91 200 Coordinates 14 42 N 91 12 W 14 700 N 91 200 W 14 700 91 200TypeCrater lake endorheicBasin countriesGuatemalaSurface area130 1 km2 50 2 sq mi 1 Max depth340 m 1 120 ft est Water volume20 km3 16 000 000 acre ft Surface elevation1 562 m 5 125 ft References 1 Contents 1 Name 2 Geography 3 Agriculture 4 Geological history 5 Ecological history 6 Culture 7 Guatemalan civil war 8 Hurricane 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 Notes 12 Further reading 13 External linksName EditAtitlan means between the waters In the Nahuatl language atl is the word for water 2 and titlan means between 3 The tl at the end of the word atl is dropped because it is a grammatical suffix and the words are combined to form Atitlan Geography EditThe lake has a maximum depth of about 340 metres 1 120 ft 1 and an average depth of 220 metres 720 ft 4 Its surface area is 130 1 km2 50 2 sq mi 1 It is approximately 18 km 8 km 11 2 mi 5 0 mi with around 20 km3 4 8 cu mi of water Atitlan is technically an endorheic lake feeding from two nearby rivers and not draining into the ocean It is shaped by deep surrounding escarpments and three volcanoes on its southern flank The lake basin is volcanic in origin filling an enormous caldera formed by a supervolcanic eruption 84 000 years ago The culture of the towns and villages surrounding Lake Atitlan is influenced by the Maya people The lake is about 50 kilometres 31 mi west northwest of Antigua It should not be confused with the smaller Lake Amatitlan Lake Atitlan is renowned as one of the most beautiful lakes in the world and is one of Guatemala s most important national and international tourist attractions 4 German explorer and naturalist Alexander von Humboldt called it the most beautiful lake in the world 5 and Aldous Huxley famously wrote of it in his 1934 travel book Beyond the Mexique Bay Lake Como it seems to me touches on the limit of permissibly picturesque but Atitlan is Como with additional embellishments of several immense volcanoes It really is too much of a good thing 6 The area around San Marcos has particularly tall cliffs abutting the lake and in recent years has become renowned for cliff diving 7 Agriculture EditThe area supports extensive coffee and avocado orchards and a variety of farm crops most notably corn and onions Significant agricultural crops include corn onions beans squash tomatoes cucumbers garlic chile verde strawberries and pitahaya fruit The lake itself is a significant food source for the largely indigenous population Geological history Edit A view across Lake Atitlan from Panajachel to Volcan San Pedro Panorama view of the lake as seen from the top of Volcan San Pedro or from the top towards the bottom of the satellite photo on the top of this page The first volcanic activity in the region occurred about 11 million years ago and since then the region has seen four separate episodes of volcanic growth and caldera collapse the most recent of which began about 1 8 million years ago and culminated in the formation of the present caldera The lake now fills a large part of the caldera reaching depths of up to 340 m 1 120 ft The caldera forming eruption is known as Los Chocoyos eruption and ejected up to 300 km3 72 cu mi of tephra The enormous eruption dispersed ash over an area of some 6 000 000 square kilometres 2 300 000 sq mi it has been detected from Florida to Ecuador and can be used as a stratigraphic marker in both the Pacific and Atlantic oceans known as Y 8 ash in marine deposits 8 A chocoyo is a type of bird which is often found nesting in the relatively soft ash layer Since the end of Los Chocoyos continuing volcanic activity has built three volcanoes in the caldera Volcan Atitlan lies on the southern rim of the caldera while Volcan San Pedro and Volcan Toliman lie within the caldera San Pedro is the oldest of the three and seems to have stopped erupting about 40 000 years ago Toliman began growing after San Pedro stopped erupting and probably remains active although it has not erupted in historic times Atitlan has developed almost entirely in the last 10 000 years and remains active its most recent eruption having occurred in 1853 On February 4 1976 a very large earthquake magnitude 7 5 struck Guatemala killing more than 26 000 people The earthquake fractured the lake bed and caused subsurface drainage from the lake allowing the water level to drop two metres 6 ft 7 in within one month 9 10 Ecological history EditIn 1955 the area around Lake Atitlan became a national park The lake was mostly unknown to the rest of the world and Guatemala was seeking ways to increase tourism and boost the local economy It was suggested by Pan American World Airways that stocking the lake with a fish prized by anglers would be a way to do just that 11 As a result an exotic non native species the black bass was introduced into the lake in 1958 The bass quickly took to its new home and caused a radical change in the species composition of the lake The predatory bass caused the elimination of more than two thirds of the native fish species in the lake and contributed to the extinction of the Atitlan grebe a rare bird that lived only in the vicinity of Lake Atitlan 12 A unique aspect of the climate is what is referred to as Xocomil of the Kaqchickel language meaning the wind that carried away sin This wind is common late morning and afternoon across the lake it is said to be the encounter of warm winds from Pacific meeting colder winds from the North In August 2015 a thick bloom of algae known as Microcystis cyanobacteria re appeared in Lake Atitlan the first major occurrence was in 2009 Bureaucratic red tape has been blamed for the lack of action to save the lake If current activities continue unchecked the toxification of the lake will make it unsuitable for human use 13 Culture Edit San Pedro la Laguna and Volcan San Pedro The lake is surrounded by many villages in which Maya culture is still prevalent and traditional dress is worn The Maya people of Atitlan are predominantly Tz utujil and Kaqchikel During the Spanish conquest of the Americas the Kaqchikel initially allied themselves with the invaders to defeat their historic enemies the Tz utujil and K iche Maya but were themselves conquered and subdued when they refused to pay tribute to the Spanish Santiago Atitlan is the largest of the lakeside communities and it is noted for its worship of Maximon an idol formed by the fusion of traditional Mayan deities Catholic saints and conquistador legends The institutionalized effigy of Maximon is under the control of a local religious brotherhood and resides in various houses of its membership during the course of a year being most ceremonially moved in a grand procession during Semana Santa Several towns in Guatemala have similar cults most notably the cult of San Simon in Zunil View from Hotel Atitlan near Panajachel While Maya culture is predominant in most lakeside communities Panajachel has been overwhelmed over the years by Guatemalan and foreign tourists It attracted many hippies in the 1960s and although the civil war caused many foreigners to leave the end of hostilities in 1996 saw visitor numbers boom again and the town s economy is almost entirely reliant on tourism today Several Mayan archeological sites have been found at the lake Sambaj located approximately 55 feet below the current lake level appears to be from at least the pre classic period 14 There are remains of multiple groups of buildings including one particular group of large buildings that are believed to have been the city center 15 A second site Chiutinamit where the remains of a city were found was discovered by local fishermen who noticed what appeared to be a city underwater 16 During subsequent investigations pottery shards were recovered from the site by divers which enabled the dating of the site to the late pre classic period 300 B C 300 A D 17 more specifically 250 AD 18 A project titled Underwater archeology in the Lake Atitlan Sambaj 2003 Guatemala was recently approved by the Government of Guatemala in cooperation with Fundacion Albenga and the Lake Museum in Atitlan Because of the concerns of a private organization as is the Lake Museum in Atitlan the need to start the exploration of the inland waters in Guatemala was analyzed 19 Map of Lake Atitlan There is no road that circles the lake Communities are reached by boat or roads from the mountains that may have brief extensions along the shore Jaibalito can only be reached by boat Santa Catarina Palopo and San Antonio Palopo are linked by road to Panajachel Main places otherwise are Santa Clara La Laguna San Juan La Laguna and San Pedro La Laguna in the west Santiago Atitlan in the south Cerro de Oro in the southeast and San Lucas Toliman in the east Recent studies indicate that a ceremonial site named Samabaj was located on an island about 500 metres 1 600 ft long in Lake Atitlan The site was revered for its striking connection to the Popol Wuj of the K iche Mayan peoples citation needed Lake Atitlan from Tzam Poc Hotel near Santa Catarina PalopoGuatemalan civil war Edit Aerial panoramic view of Lake Atitlan During the Guatemalan Civil War 1960 1996 the lake was the scene of many terrible human rights abuses as the government pursued a scorched earth policy citation needed Indigenous people were assumed to be universally supportive of the guerrillas who were fighting against the government and were targeted for brutal reprisals At least 300 Maya from Santiago Atitlan are believed to have disappeared during the conflict Two events of this era made international news One was the assassination of Stanley Rother a missionary from Oklahoma in the church at Santiago Atitlan in 1981 20 In 1990 a spontaneous protest march to the army base on the edge of town was met by gunfire resulting in the death of 11 unarmed civilians 21 International pressure forced the Guatemalan government to close the base and declare Santiago Atitlan a military free zone The memorial commemorating the massacre was damaged in the 2005 mudslide Hurricane EditTorrential rains from Hurricane Stan caused extensive damage throughout Guatemala in early October 2005 particularly around Lake Atitlan A massive landslide buried the lakeside village of Panabaj causing the death of as many as 1 400 residents leaving 5 000 homeless and many bodies buried under tonnes of earth Following this event Diego Esquina Mendoza the mayor of Santiago Atitlan declared the community a mass gravesite Those buried by the mudslide may never be rescued Here they will stay buried under five meters of mud Panabaj is now a cemetery 22 Four and a half years after Hurricane Stan Tropical Storm Agatha dropped even more rainfall causing extensive damages to the region 23 resulting in dozens of deaths between San Lucas Toliman and San Antonio Palopo Since then roads have been reopened and travel to the region has returned to normal Gallery Edit Volcano Atitlan San Pedro Toliman amp Lago Atitlan isometric view Another view from the Lake Storm over San Pedro volcano 2015 Sunrise at lake atitlan Guatemala Volcanoes of Lake Atitlan Lake Atitlan seen from San Marcos Guatemala Fisherman in Lake Atitlan Lake Atitlan and volcanoes Hotel on the shores of Lake Atitlan Guatemala Panajachel Lake Atitlan amp volcanoes from the East Clouds mountains lakes A harmful bloom of cyanobacteria blue green algae spread across the lake false colour image Hike down from the east rim to Lake Atitlan Hike down from the east rim to Lake Atitlan Panajachel Hike down from the east rim to Lake Atitlan Panajachel Santiago Atitlan map Lake Atitlan Guatemala Panorama of Lake Atitlan Guatemala Volcanoes near Lake Atitlan Guatemala Town Street Lake Atitlan Guatemala with Volcano Indigenous people near Lake Atitlan Guatemala Solala Guatemala Panjachel sunset Indigenous girls Panajachel shore View of a lancha and Volcan Atitlan from Hotel La Casa del MundoSee also EditList of places in GuatemalaPortals Guatemala GeographyNotes Edit a b c d INSIVUMEH 2008 Indice de lagos in Spanish atl Wiktionary en wiktionary org Retrieved 2018 08 17 titlan Wikcionario es wiktionary org in Spanish Retrieved 2018 08 17 a b Atitlan Lago Profile LakeNet Retrieved 9 December 2015 Morgan Szybist Richard 2004 The Lake Atitlan Reference Guide The Definitive Eco Cultural Guidebook on Lake Atitlan Adventures in Education Inc Fieser Ezra November 29 2009 How Guatemala s Most Beautiful Lake Turned Ugly Time Retrieved 2021 07 18 Lake Atitlan Guatemala The Travelers Within Retrieved 2020 07 10 Rose William I et al 1987 Quaternary silicic pyroclastic deposits of Atitlan Caldera Guatemala Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 33 1 3 57 80 Bibcode 1987JVGR 33 57R doi 10 1016 0377 0273 87 90054 0 Guatemala Volcanoes and Volcanics USGS CVO Retrieved 2010 03 13 Newhall C G Paull C K Bradbury J P Higuera Gundy A Poppe L J Self S Bonar Sharpless N Ziagos J August 1987 Recent geologic history of lake Atitlan a caldera lake in western Guatemala Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 33 1 3 81 107 Bibcode 1987JVGR 33 81N doi 10 1016 0377 0273 87 90055 2 Bad Ass Bass Rain from the Sky Revue Magazine Bad Ass Bass Rain from the Sky Revue Magazine revuemag com 29 August 2011 Retrieved 22 November 2017 Toxic Algae Invade Guatemala s Treasured Lake Atitlan ens newswire com 20 August 2015 Henry Benitez and Roberto Samayoa Samabaj y la arqueologia subacuatica en el Lago de Atitlan in XIII Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueologicas en Guatemala 1999 Guatemala Museo Nacional de Arqueologia y Etnologia 2000 2 849 54 Sorenson John L 2002 The Submergence of the City of Jerusalem in the Land of Nephi Provo Utah Maxwell Institute 2002 P N A Lund John L 2007 Mesoamerica and the Book of Mormon Is this the Place p 61 Allen Joseph 2003 Sacred Sites p 34 Divers probe Mayan ruins submerged in Guatemala lake Reuters 30 October 2009 Retrieved 22 November 2017 http www unesco org cu SitioSubacuatico english 06 monica valentini htm permanent dead link Oklahoma Missionary Murdered in Guatemala Archdiocese of Oklahoma City Archived from the original on 24 October 2015 Retrieved 9 December 2015 Guatemala Troops Said to Kill 11 Protesting Raid The New York Times 3 December 1990 Retrieved 9 December 2015 Hurricane Stan and Social Suffering in Guatemala David Rockefeller Center Harvard edu Retrieved 9 December 2015 Agatha May 2010 p 6 Archived from the original on 2010 06 07 and the effects of Tropical Storm AgathaFurther reading EditMorgan Szybist Richard 2004 The Lake Atitlan Reference Guide The Definitive Eco Cultural Guidebook on Lake Atitlan Adventures in Education Inc Newhall Christopher G Dzurisin Daniel 1988 Historical unrest at large calderas of the world USGS Bulletin 1855 p 1108 Vallance J W Calvert A T 2003 Volcanism during the past 84 ka at Atitlan caldera Guatemala American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting 2003 Kingery Dennis 2003 Improving on Nature National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science Maudslay Alfred Percival Maudslay Anne Cary 1899 A glimpse at Guatemala and some notes on the ancient monuments of Central America PDF London UK John Murray External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lake Atitlan Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Lake Atitlan AMSCLAE Authority Lake Atitlan Volcano World Information Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lake Atitlan amp oldid 1142305989, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.