Endangered Salares: micro-disasters in Northern Chile

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2021
Journal Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society
Article number 1968634
Volume | Issue number 4
Number of pages 29
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)
Abstract
This article emerges from a transdisciplinary collaboration between a micro-biologist and an anthropologist deeply concerned with the protection of endangered salares (saltpans) in northern Chile. Our aim is to establish the concept of “micro-disaster” as a tool for examining how extractivism is disrupting salares and their “deep-time” microbial ecologies. These ecologies are key for understanding early events on Earth, as their evolution enabled the oxygenation of the planet 2.5 billion years ago and caused the biodiversity explosion. By considering how being human involves being microorganismal – and how human time is entangled with microorganismic time –, this article connects neoliberal extractivist history with geo-biological evolutionary history. “Micro-disasters” therefore affect us deeply as complex humans, and oblige us to develop further a planet-centered mode of collaborating, thinking, feeling, and acting. In the context of this special issue on extinction, we insist that concerns over extinction must be considered in continuity with deep-time ecologies. We propose to rethink humans as an “environmentally complex we” simultaneously entangled with historical experiential time and microbial “deep-time.”
Document type Article
Note With Spanish text version as supplemental file: Salares en peligro de extinción: Micro-desastres en el Norte de Chile.
Language English
Related publication <i>Salares en peligro de extinción</i>: Micro-desastres en el Norte de Chile
Published at https://doi.org/10.1080/25729861.2021.1968634
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25729861.2021 (Final published version)
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