If you like your landscapes on the surreal side, then this weird and wonderful river in the Andalusia region of southwestern Spain should be to your liking. The Rio Tinto (Red River) gets its name from the reddish hue of its water, caused by high levels of iron and sulfur, which make it very acidic. This unusual chemical makeup may or may not be a result of the area"s long history of mining, which dates back at least 5,000 years. Ancient residents like the Tartessians and Romans dug here for copper, silver, and gold, as well as the mineral pyrite, commonly referred to as "fool"s gold." Legend has it that the Rio Tinto was the site of the fabled mines of King Solomon.
Reflecting on one of the world s strangest rivers
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Flower of Life symbol drawn in snow
-
Art abounds at the Palais Garnier
-
Ocracoke Lighthouse on Ocracoke Island, North Carolina
-
A place called ‘Peace’ in India
-
Okavango Delta, Botswana
-
Tracking ships on the Day of the Seafarer
-
An unlikely friendship in the wild
-
D-Day remembered
-
Indigenous Peoples Day
-
St. Patrick s Day
-
Aprils full moon
-
Corn maze in Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania
-
Squirrel Appreciation Day
-
Eurasian lynx
-
Here there be dragons
-
Honoring the fallen
-
A night on the (ghost) town
-
New York City skyline
-
Get the bear facts
-
International Day for Monuments and Sites
-
Naxos in the Cyclades Islands of Greece
-
International Sloth Day
-
The National Museum of the American Indian
-
West Cornwall Covered Bridge, Connecticut
-
Koala in the Great Otway National Park, Australia
-
A wild, craggy corner of the United States
-
Wychwood Forest, Oxfordshire, England
-
Bowling Ball Beach in Mendocino County, California
-
Mount Fuji Day
-
International Surfing Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

