Pictured here today are the guanacos in Torres del Paine National Park, Chile. These herbivores may look like llamas in disguise, but they"re truly wild at heart unlike their domesticated cousins. Found roaming the Andes mountains and Patagonian plains, these long-legged wanderers are South America"s answer to the camel family—minus the humps but with double the resilience. These adaptable creatures can thrive in extreme environments, from the dry Atacama Desert to the chilly, windswept plains of Patagonia. In fact, their name even comes from the Quechua word "huanaco," meaning a wild animal or an animal that runs fast. And run they do, at up to 35 miles per hour!
Guanacos, Torres del Paine National Park, Chile
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Bridging past and present
-
In the foothills of Snowdon
-
Marseille welcomes to Olympic torch
-
The Blue City of Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India
-
European beech forest, Belgium
-
Beauty beneath the surface
-
We can all just get along
-
Skógafoss waterfall, Iceland
-
Almond trees in full bloom, California, USA
-
A postcard-perfect landscape
-
A blue-tiful island
-
Get ready for the blood moon
-
Big rocks, big heads
-
Sunset on Santorini
-
Angkor, Cambodia
-
How can we help at-risk animals?
-
The ruins of an ancient monastery, Skellig Michael, Ireland
-
Glastonbury Festival begins
-
An underwater paradise
-
Alpine Lakes Wilderness, Washington, USA
-
A light in the coastal darkness
-
A view that’s out of this world
-
The ‘eighth wonder’?
-
Great Wall of China
-
Blue as far as the eye can see
-
Young black caiman, Tambopata National Reserve, Peru
-
Colourful house in Olinda, Pernambuco, Brazil
-
Rapa Nui National Park, Easter Island, Chile
-
Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, USA
-
Castle Stalker, Argyll, Scotland
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

