China and Chile to explore Atacama Trench with unique tools

A joint Chinese-Chilean expedition will plumb the uncharted depths of the Atacama Trench in the Pacific Ocean. Setting off from Valparaiso aboard the Chinese research vessel Tan Suo Yi Hao, the three-month mission seeks new life forms and insights into earthquakes and tsunamis. The collaboration provides Chilean scientists with tools no other country possesses.

On Monday, the Chinese research vessel Tan Suo Yi Hao will depart from the Chilean port city of Valparaiso, carrying researchers on a three-month expedition covering 700km (435 miles) around the Atacama Trench. The Atacama Trench is one of the deepest and least explored regions of the eastern Pacific. The expedition, three years in the making, is led by the Institute of Deep-sea Science and Engineering of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and the Millennium Institute of Oceanography (IDO) of the University of Concepcion, Chile.

The expedition committee has described it as “the largest [such operation] in the area carried out to date”. The university said in a statement on January 9: “an alliance formed years before which allows Chilean scientists to use tools that no other country currently possesses, accelerating years of research in only one mission”.

The mission will involve 33 research stations and nearly 20 submersible dives to probe the trench's depths. It is seen as key to understanding subduction processes along the Pacific seismic belt – with direct implications for China, Japan, the Koreas and Southeast Asia.

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President José Antonio Kast oversees trench-digging launch of Escudo Fronterizo border security plan at Chacalluta, Arica.
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Kast launches Escudo Fronterizo plan in Chacalluta, Arica

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President José Antonio Kast oversaw the start of Escudo Fronterizo plan works on Monday at Chacalluta border complex in Arica, featuring trenches up to three meters deep to curb irregular migration. The initiative divides Chilean opposition and prompts reactions from Peru and Bolivia. Ministers outlined 500 km coverage along the northern border.

Scientists have used swarms of minuscule earthquakes to map a hidden and intricate tectonic structure beneath northern California. This region, at the intersection of the San Andreas fault and the Cascadia subduction zone, involves five moving pieces rather than the expected three. The findings help explain past seismic events and improve hazard predictions.

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Japan has begun a five-week experiment to extract rare earth minerals from the deep seabed off Minamitorishima Island, aiming to reduce reliance on China for critical materials. The project, aboard the research vessel Chikyu, marks the first prolonged collection effort at such depths and highlights tensions between energy security and environmental risks. Officials hope it will support Japan's carbon neutrality goals by 2050 while bolstering industrial competitiveness.

An international team of scientists has documented nearly 800 species, many previously unknown, living nearly 4,000 meters below the Pacific Ocean's surface. Their five-year study in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone also tested the environmental impacts of deep-sea mining, finding significant local reductions in animal numbers and diversity. The findings, published in Nature Ecology and Evolution, provide crucial data for regulating future extraction of critical metals.

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Chile's National Seismological Center at the University of Chile recorded four earthquakes with magnitudes from 4.1 to 4.5 on Monday, March 23, across various regions. Most were imperceptible due to their depth and Chile's position at the Nazca and South American plates boundary. Senapred recalled basic safety guidelines for earthquakes.

Colombia shines in international science and cinema with the filming of PBS's Amazon Extremes documentary. The team will shoot in the Tatacoa Desert in Huila, after recordings in Peru and Brazil. The production explores the Amazon's deep history and its current environmental challenges.

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Noticias RCN's scientific expedition departed from Cartagena aboard the ARC Simón Bolívar, with a crew of 90 experts and journalists, for an over 80-day journey to Antarctica. After crossing the Panama Canal, the team heads into the Pacific toward Valparaíso in Chile before reaching the white continent.

 

 

 

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