Earth Processes · Peru

Fluvial Processes,
Oceans & Coastlines

From the Amazon to the Pacific—the waters that erode, transport, and sustain the Peruvian landscape.

Océano Pacífico

Pacific Ocean and the Humboldt Current

The Humboldt Current carries cold water from Antarctica along the entire Peruvian coast, creating one of the world’s richest marine ecosystems. This cold current is responsible for the arid climate of the coast and the extraordinary fishing productivity of the Peruvian sea.

~64.4°F average temperature of the Peruvian sea
Inundaciones

Flooding and El Niño phenomenon

The El Niño phenomenon abnormally warms the waters of the tropical Pacific, triggering torrential rains along Peru’s northern coast that turn deserts into rivers of mud. The El Niño events of 1982–83 and 2017 caused billions of dollars in infrastructure damage.

Rivers on the western slope, such as the Piura and the Tumbes, can swell to hundreds of times their normal flow within a few hours.

3–7 years average El Niño cycle
Puerto y rutas marítimas

Pacific Shipping Routes

The Port of Callao is the largest on the South American Pacific coast. Since colonial times, Lima-Callao has been the hub of trade between Spain and its American colonies, channeling silver, gold, and goods across the Pacific.

Today, shipping routes to Asia have made Callao a strategic hub for global trade, with direct connections to China, Japan, and South Korea.

#1 port on the South American Pacific coast
Costa peruana

Coast, Cliffs, and Islands

Peru’s 3,080 km of coastline is mostly arid, dominated by cliffs, sandy beaches, and rocky peninsulas. The Paracas National Reserve and the Ballestas Islands are home to massive colonies of sea lions, Humboldt penguins, and guano birds.

The guano accumulated on these islands was so valuable in the 19th century that it sparked the Guano War and became Peru’s largest source of revenue at that time.

3,080 km of Pacific coastline
Tsunami y tormentas

Hurricanes and Tsunamis

Peru rarely experiences hurricanes because the cold Humboldt Current suppresses the thermal energy needed to form them. However, tsunamis are a real threat: the Peru-Chile Trench, where the Nazca Plate subducts, is a constant source of large-magnitude undersea earthquakes.

The 1746 tsunami completely destroyed the port of Callao following an earthquake with an estimated magnitude of 8.8, killing more than 5,000 people.

8.8 Mw the earthquake that triggered the 1746 tsunami

“The Amazon River accounts for approximately 20% of all the freshwater that the world’s rivers discharge into the oceans.”

— River Hydrology · Amazon Basin —

Historical Maritime Routes of Peru

Ocean currents · Ports · Trade routes

Mapa

Historical Water Events

Tsunamis, Floods, and Coastal Events in Peru

1586

Lima Tsunami

A major earthquake triggered a tsunami that struck Callao and Lima, marking one of the earliest documented records from the colonial era.

1746

The Destruction of Callao

The largest tsunami in Peru’s history devastated the port of Callao. Of the approximately 5,000 residents, only about 200 survived. The waves reached several kilometers inland.

1982 – 1983

The Devastating El Niño

One of the most intense El Niño events of the 20th century caused devastating floods in northern Peru and a severe drought in the south, affecting millions of people.

2001

The Camaná Tsunami

Following an 8.4-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Arequipa, a tsunami struck the beaches of Camaná during the holiday season, claiming more than 75 lives.

2017

The Coastal El Niño

An unusual warming phenomenon in the Pacific off the coast of Peru triggered historic rainfall. More than 100,000 homes were destroyed, and 1.6 million people were affected across the country.