Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Anthropological-Research-with-the-Community-of-Chiloe-Island-27MZIFJJCQVIA.htmlConceptually similarAnthropological Research with the Community of Chiloé IslandGP0STPVJXCompleted★★★★Anthropological Research with the Community of Chiloé IslandGP0STPVJPCompleted★★★★Anthropological Research with the Community of Chiloé IslandGP0STPVJSCompleted★★★★Anthropological Research with the Community of Chiloé IslandGP0STPVJTCompleted★★★★Meeting with Clams Collectors in Chiloé IslandGP0STPVJVCompleted★★★★Meeting with Clams Collectors in Chiloé IslandGP0STPVJWCompleted★★★★Meeting with Clams Collectors in Chiloé IslandGP0STPVJYCompleted★★★★Anthropological Research with the Community of Chiloé IslandGP0STPVJOCompleted★★★★Anthropological Research with the Community of Chiloé IslandGP0STPVJLCompleted★★★★View AllGP0STPVJZAnthropological Research with the Community of Chiloé IslandAnthropologist Francisco Ther during a community mapping meeting in the town of Cucao. A team from Greenpeace Chile is in Chiloé Island for the second time to document the environmental crisis which caused the mass mortality of marine species on the coast of Chile. The team includes an anthropologist to evaluate how the population has been affected.Locations:Chile-Chiloé Island-South AmericaDate:23 May, 2016Credit:© Cristobal Olivares / GreenpeaceMaximum size:5616px X 3744pxKeywords:Close ups-Day-Hands-Indoors-KWCI (GPI)-Maps-Meetings-Oceans (campaign title)-ScientistsShoot:Environmental Disaster Investigative Expedition in ChiloéActivists and researchers from Greenpeace Chile have traveled for the second time to Chiloé Island to document the environmental crisis which caused the mass mortality of marine species on the coast of Chile. The team includes an anthropologist to evaluate how the population has been affected.In the last month alone, thousands of marine animals including birds, crabs and seals have washed ashore, dead, on Chiloé’s beaches. The call for an investigation comes after approximately five thousand tons of rotting salmon was discharged from salmon farming centers into the ocean on the largest island of the Chiloé Archipelago off the coast of Chile, in the Pacific Ocean.Related Collections:Environmental Crisis in Chiloé Island in Chile (All photographers & Video)