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!!!Perus Toquepala copper mine

[{Image src='140pe.jpg' width='540' height='540' alt='Perus Toquepala copper mine' class='image_left' caption='Photo courtesy of NASA. ' popup='false'}]
[{SET customtitle='Perus Toquepala copper mine'}]
The rugged, mineral-rich Andes support some of the worlds biggest mines (gold, silver, copper, and more). This image looks down the bulls-eye of Perus Toquepala copper mine, a steep sided and stepped open-pit mine. Mid-afternoon sunlight on the arid slopes of the central Andes mountains provides an accent to the mine contours. 

At the surface, the open pit is 2.5 km (1.5 mi) across, and it descends more than 700 m (2,300 ft) into the earth. A dark line on the wall of the pit is the main access road to the bottom. Spoil dumps of material mined from the pit are arranged in tiers along the northwest lip of the pit. 

Numerous angular leaching fields appear lower right, and the railroad to the coast is a line that exits the image center left. The railroad was built to export Toquepalas copper and connects the coastal port of Ilo, 95 km (60 mi) to the southwest.