Siecha Lakes

Siecha Lakes

Siecha Lakes, from left (east) to right (west)
Siecha, Guasca, De los Patos
Siecha Lakes
Location Guasca, Cundinamarca
Coordinates 4°45′52″N 73°51′04″W / 4.76444°N 73.85111°W / 4.76444; -73.85111Coordinates: 4°45′52″N 73°51′04″W / 4.76444°N 73.85111°W / 4.76444; -73.85111
Type Glacial
Part of Chingaza Natural National Park
Basin countries Colombia
Surface area 141,401 m²[1]
Max. depth 25 m (82 ft)
Surface elevation 3590[2]
Painting of Lake Siecha, 1855
Famous Muisca raft
a similar raft was found in Lake Siecha but lost due to fire of the ship in the harbour of Bremen

The Siecha Lakes are three glacial lakes located in the Chingaza Natural National Park in Cundinamarca, Colombia. The Andean lakes are considered sacred in the religion of the Muisca who inhabited the area before the Spanish conquest of the Muisca in the 1530s.[3]

Etymology

In the Chibcha language of the Muisca Siecha means "House of the Lord".[4]

Description

The Siecha Lakes consist of three small glacial lakes, from large to small and east to west; Siecha (63,893 m²),[1] Guasca (56,846 m²)[1] and De los Patos (20,662 m²).[1] Alternative names for the smaller two are Fausto and America.[4] The lakes belong to the municipality of Guasca. Fauna around the lakes are the birds American purple gallinule, helmeted curassow, torrent duck, Andean cock-of-the-rock, eagles and orange-fronted parakeet. In the lakes the birds Oxyura jamaicensis andina, Andean teal and the American coot can be found. Mammals around the lakes include the spectacled bear, white-tailed deer, red deer and the little red brocket.[4]

History

In the colonial period, the lakes were partly drained to extract the golden artefacts of the Muisca from the water. In 1855 a golden raft was found in one of the lakes, similar to the famous Muisca raft. It was named Balsa de Siecha or "Siecha raft" and pictured in the book El Dorado by Muisca scholar Liborio Zerda in 1883. The discovery of the raft made Zerda believe that the site of the initiation ritual of the new zipa was not in Lake Guatavita, yet in the Siecha Lakes.[5] Later, the raft was more-or-less legally taken from Colombia to Europe. The transporting ship burnt in the harbour of Bremen and the raft was lost.[4]

Tourism

To visit the lakes certain rules apply; visits are only possible on Saturdays and Sundays, access at the entrance point needs to be not later than 10:00 AM and exit not after 16:00 PM. A maximum of 30 visitors per day is allowed.[4]

See also

Liborio Zerda
Muisca religion
Lake Guatavita, Lake Iguaque, Lake Tota

References

Bibliography

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lake Siecha.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.