Cerro San Ramón

Cerro San Ramón
West aspect
Highest point
Elevation3,255 m (10,679 ft)[1]
Prominence923 m (3,028 ft)[1]
Isolation22.05 km (13.70 mi)[1]
Coordinates33°29′10″S 70°26′19″W / 33.486126°S 70.438677°W / -33.486126; -70.438677[1]
Geography
Cerro San Ramón
Location in Chile
Cerro San Ramón
Cerro San Ramón (South America)
Interactive map of Cerro San Ramón
CountryChile
ProvinceSantiago / Cordillera
Protected areaWaters of Ramon Natural Park
Parent rangeAndes
Sierra de Ramón[2]
Topo mapIGM E-059 Hoja Farellones[2]
Climbing
Easiest routeTrail[1]

Cerro San Ramón is a mountain on the boundary shared by Santiago Province and Cordillera Province in Chile.

Description

Cerro San Ramón is a 3,255-meter-elevation (10,679-foot) summit in the Andes. The peak is located 18 kilometers (11.2 miles) east of the center of Santiago, and it is the highest point in the Sierra de Ramón as well as Parque Natural Aguas de Ramón (Waters of Ramón Natural Park).[1] Precipitation runoff from the mountain's slopes drains into the Maipo River watershed. Topographic relief is significant as the summit rises 2,450 meters (8,038 ft) above the city of Peñalolén in six kilometers (3.7 miles), and 2,425 meters (7,956 ft) above the Maipo River in nine kilometers (5.6 miles). A popular 23.6 km (14.7 mi) round-trip trail climbs to the summit as it gains 2,527 meters (8,293 ft) of elevation.[3] The nearest higher peak is Cerro Colorado, 22 kilometers (13.7 miles) to the northeast.[1] There is no definitive explanation for who the namesake is, with one theory suggesting it could be Alonso García de Ramón (c. 1552–1610), who was the Royal Governor of Chile.[2] In 2016, stone structures known as pircas and fragments of ceramic vessels of Inca origin were discovered near the top of Cerro San Ramón, in the sector called Portezuelo del Inca, suggesting that the mountain was part of the Inca's sacred geography.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Cerro San Ramón". Peakvisor.com. Retrieved December 30, 2025.
  2. ^ a b c Cerro de Ramón (3253 m.), Andeshandbook.org, Retrieved December 30, 2025.
  3. ^ Cerro San Ramón, Alltrails.com, Retrieved December 30, 2025.
  4. ^ Inca remains discovered on San Ramón Hill, cnnchile.com, Retrieved December 30, 2025.