VALDIVIA, CHILE: STORIES OF SURVIVAL
Thursday August 23, 2007 Produced by Terrascope Radio at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
A group of MIT freshmen travel to Valdivia, Chile, a city that in 1960 experienced the most powerful earthquake in recorded history -- 9.5 on the Richter Scale -- followed by a devastating tsunami. While there, the students explore three stories of survival: The ecological survival of a unique wetland created by the earthquake/tsunami; the cultural survival of the Mapuche, the local indigenous people; and the personal survival of those who lived through the disasters of 1960.
Also featured in this program: two MIT students get a close-up look at animals and birds of the Galapagos Islands. This is an excerpt of a documentary that explores ecological pressures in the Galapagos created by the fishing and tourism industries. Look for the entire program in a future edition of Sprouts.
If you air this program, please let Terrascope Radio know! Contact Ari Epstein by e-mail at: awe@mit.edu or by phone at: (617) 253-3666. Feel free also to call or write with any questions about this program or about other programming produced by Terrascope Radio.
Sprouts is a weekly program produced in collaboration with community radio stations and independent producers across the country. We bring you local stories of national interest produced at these radio stations and media groups.
The program is offered free of charge to all radio stations. For information, or if you would like to feature your work on Sprouts, contact Ursula Ruedenberg at ursula@pacifica. org.
Left KU Channel
August 23, 2007, 3PM EST
Total time 29:00 minutes
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