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Salar de Uyuni: The world’s largest salt desert and lithium reservoir surrounded by volcanoes

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Salar de Uyuni: The world’s largest salt desert and lithium reservoir surrounded by volcanoes

QUICK FACTS

Name: Salar de Uyuni

Location: Andean plateau, southwest Bolivia

Coordinates: -20.279074890164193, -67.35323215355417

Why it’s incredible: The salt flat is the largest on Earth and contains a huge chunk of the world’s lithium.

Salar de Uyuni is the largest salt desert on Earth, stretching roughly 4,000 square miles (10,400 square kilometers) across the Andean plateau. Uyuni is famous for its gleaming expanses of salt bathed in water, and for the mesmerizing honeycomb patterns found in the desert’s driest corners.

Salar de Uyuni has an average elevation of 12,000 feet (3,660 meters) above sea level — but it wasn’t always so. Around 5 million years ago, the region where the Andes mountains sit today was low-lying and the climate became arid, Sarah McKnight, an assistant professor of hydrogeology at the University of Dayton in Ohio, told Live Science.

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