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The World's Highest Large Lake

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(Image credit: NASA/JSC)

Lake Titicaca, at an elevation of 12,507 feet (3,812 meters) in the Andean Altiplano, is the highest large lake in the world. More than 120 miles long and 50 miles wide, it was the center of the Incan civilization, and today straddles the boundary between Peru and Bolivia.

Perhaps more importantly, Lake Titicaca contains one of South America's longest climate records, extending back more than 25,000 years, according to a NASA statement. Scientists have studied indicators of the water level changes over time in Lake Titicaca to tease out information about precipitation shifts in the high Andes and the South American tropics.

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