PhotosLocation


Cardenal_Antonio_Samoré_Pass Latitude and Longitude:

40°42′S 71°56′W / 40.700°S 71.933°W / -40.700; -71.933
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cardenal Antonio Samoré
View of the pass during winter
Elevation1,314 m (4,311 ft)
Location ArgentinaChile border
Range Andes
Coordinates 40°42′S 71°56′W / 40.700°S 71.933°W / -40.700; -71.933

Cardenal Antonio Samoré Pass ( Spanish: Paso Cardenal Antonio Samoré) is one of the main mountain passes through the southern Andes along the border between Argentina and Chile.

Together with Paso Libertadores, it is one of the easiest of the Argentina-Chile passes, and one of the few with asphalted roads in the region. The main towns and cities respectively on both sides of the pass are Entre Lagos and Osorno in Chile and Villa La Angostura and San Carlos de Bariloche in Argentina. From the Chilean side the pass is accessed through Route 215-CH, branch line which begins at the Panamerican Highway in Osorno. On the Argentine side the pass is reached by Ruta Nacional 231.

Since 1974 there is a treaty that guarantee the transport of Chilean goods from the Chilean X Los Lagos Region to the XII Magallanes and Antártica Chilena Region over the Paso Samoré through the Argentine Patagonia. [1]

Samoré Pass on the map

History

It is named after Cardinal Antonio Samorè, who mediated in the Beagle conflict between Chile and Argentina from 1978 to 1983. Operation Soberanía, the Argentine invasion plan, considered an offensive of the Third Army Corps under command of Luciano Benjamín Menéndez through Samoré Pass to seize Los Lagos Region.

Before it was renamed, it was known as Paso Puyehue after Puyehue Lake.

References

  1. ^ Article Disputa con Chile por la reapertura del paso Samoré Archived 2016-05-16 at the Wayback Machine in the Argentine newspaper "La Nación on 4. August 2011, retrieved on 4. August 2011