Queulat National Park
Queulat National Park is a national park of Chile located in the Aysén del General Carlos Ibáñez del Campo Region. The park is bordered by the Cisnes River on the south side and is neighbor to Lago Rosselot National Reserve. It contains of glacier-capped mountains and virgin evergreen forests.
History
In 1766, the Jesuit Father José García Alsue explored the area searching for the City of the Caesars.Park geography
Local relief is dominated by the Patagonian Andes, with some elevations greater than above sea level. A portion of the Puyuhuapi Volcanic Group form part of the park, specifically the area south of the Lake Risopatrón. The park comprises two small ice fields, with glaciers of up to long. The largest glaciated area is Queulat ice cap, which encompasses about and contains the park's centerpiece, the Queulat Hanging Glacier. This ice cap is centered at, and is at an elevation of. The other ice cap covers an area of approximately and is centered at an unnamed summit at, at an elevation of. The main ice cap borders the northernmost part of the Puyuhuapi Channel called Ventisquero Sound.Cascada de Ventisquero Colgante, a large waterfall, is located in the park. As the meltwaters of the eponymous glacier proceed into the Témpanos River, they fall down the waterfall's single vertical drop.
Other attractions in the park are the Queulat Sound, Father García and The Cóndor Falls, and Cat's Stone.