The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Solar eclipse plunges southern Chile, Argentina into darkness

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PUCON, Chile: A solar eclipse that lasted around two minutes plunged southern Chile and Argentina into darkness on Monday.

Heavy rain had threatened to prevent thousands of star gazers in Chile from seeing the eclipse but at the last moment the clouds parted just enough for the phenomenon to be partially visible.

“It was beautiful, unique. The truth is that no-one held much hope of seeing it due to the weather and clouds, but it was unique because it cleared up just in time. It was a miracle,” an emotional Matias Tordecilla, 18, told AFP from the town of Pucon on the shores of Lake Villarrica.

“It’s something that you don’t just see with your eyes but also feel with your heart,” added Tordecilla, who travelled 10 hours with his family to see the eclipse.

In Argentine Patagonia, several families and foreigners had set up camp between the towns of Villa El Chocon and Piedra del Aguila hoping to see the eclipse.

While there was no rain there, strong winds had threatened to impact visibility of the second total eclipse for Chile in the last 18 months.

This one struck at 1.00pm as thousands of tourists and residents gathered, hoping the clouds would disappear in time.

“It made my skin crawl,” said Pucon resident Cinthia Vega.

Despite restrictio­ns on movement due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, almost 300,000 tourists had arrived in the Araucania region around 800 km south of the capital Santiago.

Dozens of amateur and profession­al scientists set up telescopes on the slopes of the Villarrica volcano – one of the most active in Chile –to observe the phenomenon when the moon passes between the sun and Earth.

The eclipse was due to be visible along a 90-km wide corridor from the Pacific coast in Chile across the Andes mountain range and into Argentina.

This event was eagerly anticipate­d amongst Chile’s Mapuche indigenous community, the largest such group in the country’s south.

In Mapuche culture, an eclipse signifies the temporary death of the sun during a battle between the star and an evil force known as “Wekufu.”

According to indigenous expert Juan Nanculef, the people would light bonfires and launch “stones and arrows into the air” to help the sun in its battle against the Wekufu.

Nanculef actually performed a ritual as the eclipse began to ask nature to bring an end to the rains and make it visible.

“Previously it was 100 per cent effective,” he said. This time it seems to have worked just well enough to give people a glimpse of the eclipse.

 ??  ?? A man takes pictures of the total solar eclipse in Pucon, southern Chile.
A man takes pictures of the total solar eclipse in Pucon, southern Chile.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? Combinatio­n of pictures shows the different stages of the total solar eclipse as seen from Piedra del Aquila, Neuquen province, Argentina.
— AFP photos Combinatio­n of pictures shows the different stages of the total solar eclipse as seen from Piedra del Aquila, Neuquen province, Argentina.

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