Wonderland: Patagonia



One afternoon in the early 70s, in Paris, I went to see the architect and designer Eileen Gray, who at the age of ninety-three thought nothing of a fourteen-hour working day. She lived in the rue Bonaparte, and in her salon hung a map of Patagonia, which she had painted in gouache. ‘I’ve always wanted to go there,’ I said. ‘So have I,’ she added. ‘Go there for me.’ I went. I cabled the Sunday Times: ‘Have Gone to Patagonia’. In my rucksack I took Mandelstam’s Journey to Armenia and Hemingway’s In Our Time. Six months later I came back with the bones of a book that, this time, did get published. While stringing its sentences together, I thought that telling stories was the only conceivable occupation for a superfluous person such as myself. I am older and a bit stiffer, and I am thinking of settling down. Eileen Gray’s map now hangs in my apartment. But the future is tentative. 
[Bruce Chatwin. Anatomy of Restlessness. London: Penguin Books, 1996.]

Geologists that traveled to Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego between 1927 and 1938

Over time I came to realize that Patagonia is a good place to be from. The strong wind blowing from the plateau towards the Atlantic Ocean, the barren landscape discontinuously covered by grasses and thorn bushes, and the almost total absence of people (one inhabitant per square kilometer) makes for a place mysterious enough to catch others’ imagination.


Gran Bajo de San Julián, Descripción Geológica de la Patagonia     

Shehuenense between Arroyo Guanaco and the Rio Leona, 
Descripción Geológica de la Patagonia    

Charles Darwin visited Patagonia as naturalist of the Beagle between 1833 and 1836. He discovered the remains of extinct fossil vertebrates imbedded in the rocks of the sea cliffs along Bahia Blanca, San Julian and Gallegos. By 1887 Carlos and Florentino Ameghino made discoveries that aroused the interest of paleontologists and geologists everywhere. Between 1896 and 1899 the Geological Department of Princeton University and more specifically John Bell Hatcher conceived and organized three geological, paleontological, zoological and botanical expeditions to Patagonia to make collections of vertebrate and invertebrate fossils. Check out the beautiful illustrations of the eight volume expedition report.

Cañon of the Rio Tarde, Reports of the Princeton University Expeditions to Patagonia, 1896-1899


Tehuelche family, Reports of the Princeton University Expeditions to Patagonia, 1896-1899


These scientists didn’t know yet that there was oil hidden below this badland of lava, clay and sedimentary rocks. It was discovered near Comodoro Rivadavia in 1907 and turned out to be a game changer. In 1922 President Hipólito Yrigoyen and General Enrique Mosconi created YPF (Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales), the first entirely state-run oil company in the world. Soon after, Mosconi commissioned a small group of geologists a full topographical and geological analysis in the area of Golfo San Jorge. The geologist Egidio Feruglio arrived in Argentina in 1925 and was Chief of the Geological Team until 1941. The three volumes that constitute his Descripción Geológica de la Patagonia are a wonderful tool to travel with the imagination across this remote land.

Reserva Fiscal de Comodoro Rivadavia, Descripción Geológica de la Patagonia, Egidio Feruglio

Tobas de Sarmiento, Descripción Geológica de la Patagonia, Egidio Feruglio

Tobas de Sarmiento and Rio Deseado, Descripción Geológica de la Patagonia, Egidio Feruglio

These innocent sections were the first step towards the increasing exploitation of a territory that today appears completely modified. What used to be a fragile arid land subjected only to the abrasive and modelling action of the wind is today traversed by hundreds of roads, power and pipe lines, and is dotted by thousands of oil wells. 



Photographs © Mariana Siracusa

And for a while we were under the impression that all the damage could be remediated. We believed that, with the help of some international bank or corporation, measures could be taken to restore the ground cover and decrease surface runoff. The truth is that now that the price of oil is down to 43 dollars a barrel we are not so optimistic. 





Photographs © Mariana Siracusa

And maybe the problem is also that we still have the Fitz Roy and the Perito Moreno Glacier to keep the flag flying for the Patagonian legend. They are still, for most, one of those breathtaking unconquered frontiers that make people forget how fragile the land is. We look at these blinding beauties and assume that they will always be there, everlasting. 
That is why, as is the case with so many other natural reserves, they have been often used to hide the other face of Patagonia, the one that is covered in machines and stained with oil.

Fitz Roy (3,375 m), Descripción Geológica de la Patagonia, Photograph © Standhardt

This post is the first of a series dealing with remote areas of the world that were first conquered by imagination, then by science and economy.