Diagnostic utility of circumferential peripheral globules under dermoscopy in adults
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Date
2021
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
HUMANA PRESS INC
Abstract
© 2021 Centro Universitario de Anapolis. All rights reserved.This article addresses the interrelationships between climate and society during the 1870s in Chile, based on the analysis of historical sources such as the Bulletin of the National Agricultural Society, the newspaper El Mercurio de Valparaíso, the Presidential Messages, and the book "El Clima de Chile" published in 1877 by Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna. After showcasing the critical socioeconomic context of the period, it is found that national agriculture, represented chiefly by the production and export of wheat, was exposed not only to meteorological fluctuations but also to pests, epizootics, and poor agricultural practices that led to socio-ecological imbalances, which at that time were attributed solely to weather. Here it is proposed that it was the storms and great floods of 1877 caused by the El Niño phenomenon, which accelerated and exacerbated the deep political, social, and economic crisis wherein the country found itself. This crisis was overcome by the Chilean elite by waging the War of the Pacific and incorporating the saltpeter territories, among the greatest natural riches of the time.
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Keywords
Crisis, El Niño, Farming, Floods, Wheat
