9 Amazing Facts About Bolivia's Salar de Uyuni That Will Blow Your Mind (And #6 Even Surprises Locals!)
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3. Prehistoric Lake Origins
Representing one of Earth's most amazing changes from ancient lake to salt desert, Salar de Uyuni's intriguing geological past goes back over 40,000 years. Originally part of Lake Minchin, a vast prehistoric lake covering most of Southwest Bolivia, the salt flat was Two current lakes, Poopó and Uru Uru, plus two main salt deserts, Salar de Coipasa and Salar de Uyuni, left behind after this ancient lake dried out. Scientists have shown that significant Pleistocene climatic fluctuations affected this region's many shifts between lake and desert conditions. An invaluable site for paleoclimatic research, the layers of salt and silt that create today's salt flat offer a thorough record of climate change over tens of thousands of years.

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