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Production of subterranean resources in the Atacama Desert: 19th and early 20th century mining/water extraction in The Taltal district,northern Chile
Institution:4. Universidad de Tarapacá, General Velásquez 1775, 1000007, Arica, Chile;1. Instituto de Arqueología y Antropología, Universidad Católica del Norte, San Pedro de Atacama, Chile;2. Departamento de Antropología, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile;1. University of Concepción, Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Concepción, Chile;2. University of Murcia, Regional Campus of International Excellence, Mare Nostrum Campus, Faculty of Biology, Department of Ecology and Hydrology, Murcia, Spain;1. Centro de Investigaciones Costeras-Universidad de Atacama (CIC-UDA), Avenida Copayapu 485, Copiapó, Atacama, Chile;2. Desnivel Perú S.A.C., Av. Larco Nro. 687 Int. 207, Miraflores, Lima, Peru;3. Instituto de Investigaciones Científicas y Tecnológicas de la Universidad de Atacama (IDICTEC-UDA), Avenida Copayapu 485, Copiapó, Chile;4. Seaweed Solutions AS, Bynesveien 50C, 7018, Trondheim, Norway;1. George Washington University, Department of Geography, USA;2. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Environmental Solutions Initiative, USA;3. Clark University, Graduate School of Geography, USA;1. Departamento de Ingeniería Hidráulica y Ambiental, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Av. Vicuña Mackenna 4860, Santiago, Chile;2. Institute of Geography, Heidelberg University, Im Neuenheimer Feld 368, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany;3. Instituto de Geografía, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Av. Vicuña Mackenna 4860, Santiago, Chile;4. Centro Interdisciplinario de Cambio Global, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Av. Vicuña Mackenna 4860, Santiago, Chile;5. Centro Nacional de Investigación para la Gestión Integrada de Desastres Naturales CONICYT/FONDAP/15110017, Av. Vicuña Mackenna 4860, Santiago, Chile;6. Centro de Desarrollo Urbano Sustentable CONICYT/FONDAP/15110020, Los Navegantes 1963, Providencia, Santiago, Chile;7. Departamento de Ecosistemas y Medio Ambiente, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Av. Vicuña Mackenna 4860, Santiago, Chile
Abstract:The Chilean water model imposed by the Chilean dictatorship in 1981 is broadly known as a radical example of neoliberal water management. Several studies have focused their analyses on this model, and its relation to mining, from a political ecology perspective; however, this has minimized the broader historical context. In this paper, we followed a geohistorical standpoint to gain an extensive understanding of the processes of mining development and the related water extraction in the Atacama Desert. By analyzing different official documents, historical sources and scientific discourses of the 19th and early 20th centuries, we aimed to denaturalize the idea of the Atacama Desert as hyper-arid space, rich in mineral resources. By doing so, from a political ecology perspective, and with a critical approach to territory, we interrogated the mining development in the Taltal district (1840–1920). This exercise led us to understand the Atacama Desert as a socially-produced mining territory, or miningscape, where foreign actors have produced hegemonic discourses and uneven materialities. Here, water, minerals, global markets, scientific knowledge, political and legal discourses, and colonialism have inevitably become interwoven in a territorial long-standing production process. Thus, we propose that the production of miningscapes and waterscapes are entangled process in the Andes mining territories. In turn, this process has enabled the reproduction of the Chilean state, capital accumulation, and the consolidation of a modern project at the expense of local populations and rationalities, which have been invisibilized.
Keywords:Miningscapes  Waterscapes  Subterranean territory  Northern Chile  Atacama desert
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