Bolivian Andes East of Coastal Chile’s Atacama Desert During Ice Age Snow-Line Down to 10,000 Feet Now Up to 20,000

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About 150 miles east of northern Chile’s Pacific coastal Atacama desert are the Bolivian Andes, those mountains of 20,000 foot elevations now and since the end of the Ice Age in essence glacier-free but during the Ice Age the snow-line down to 10,000 feet, when no doubt because of the much greater cloud cover and much more precipitation the Atacama desert, home to the ancient Chinchoro people, was verdant until the Ice Age began to end circa 1500 b. c. (when the ocean had cooled to about today’s temperatures about nine hundred year after Noah’s Flood).