Jilachi Desert

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Jilachi Desert
Patterns in Desert Sand (Unsplash).jpg
Sand dunes in the Jilachi Desert near Aztlán.
Jilachi Desert in Gran Rugido.png
Extension of the Jilachi Desert in Gran Rugido
Ecology
RealmNeotropical
BiomeDeserts and xeric shrublands
BordersValle de Laura, Valle de la Calma, Estepas del Sur.
Geography
Area355,600 km2 (137,300 sq mi)
CountryGran Rugido
StateXayacatlán, Senora, and Córdoba.
RiversXocoyotzin, Apan, Utapau.
Conservation
Conservation statusRelatively Stable/Intact
Protected51%

The Jilachi Desert (Spanish: Desierto de Jilachi) is a South Olivacian desert and ecoregion that covers large parts of the center portions of Gran Rugido and the states of Senora, Xayacatlán as well as Córdoba. Covering an estiamte 355,600 square kilometers (137,300 sq mi), the Jilachi Desert is one of the hottest deserts in the region of South Olivacia. The Jilachi Desert in phytogeography, is within the Senoran Floristic province of the Calm Region of eastern South Olivacia, part of the Neotropical realm of the southern Eastern Hemisphere. The desert contains a variety of unique endemic plants and animals, notably, the saguaro and organ pipe cactus. Historically, the Jilachi region provides subtropical warmth in winter and two seasons of rainfall creating an extreme contrast between aridity and moisture. However, since the industrailization and issues with global warming, historical areas of the desert have come to create dry summers and cold winters as a result of the greenhouse effect. Certain areas however, are still proeminent to this contrast between aridity and moisture.

As of 2021, important cities located within the immediate desert include the capital of San Jorge Xayacatlán, the ever-growing Aztlán, Izalco and Izamal.

Etymology

The earliest names for the Jilachi Desert according to the Pre-Canterian civilizations that inhabited Gran Rugido were:Chalko (Sapinish: Place of Sand). Xalyukatlan (Sapinish: Sand desert) and Xalatlajko (Sapinish: Place in the middle of the sands). The Tarascanian people oftern called this region the bilim and both the Tarascans and the Sapinish cultures acknowledged the hostility and near-impossible survivavility of the desert so it became a place were disgraced warriors were exiled without any basic supplies. The issue even continued after human sacrifice often took care of disgraced warrios, criminals or offenders to the polytheist religions of the Tarascans and the Sapinish.

The namesake Jilachi comes from the Alejandro Jilachi de Grijalva, one of the very first Canterians to explore the entirety of the desert. Until the XIX Century, the desert was still refered as Xayacatlán o Xalco. Investigator and descendant of Jilachi de Grijalva, Bruno Grijalva suggested the name Desierto de Jilachi to president Ángel Lenoci as a homage to the Canterian explorer.

Climate

The Jilachi desert has an arid climate. In the lower-elevation portions of the desert, temperatures are warm year-round, and rainfall is infrequent and irregular, often less than 90 mm annually, while the higher-elevation points often recive more even minimal rainfall. During relief efforts of the 2021 Rugidoense drought, concerns between scientists and researchers arose when the first use of cloud seeding was authorized in the area. The main concern was whether this strategy could alter precipitation rates on the area on undesired levels, even capable of destroying flora or fauna around the area.

Flora

Human population

El Cementerio

Protected areas