Del océano al verso. Las caracolas de Pablo Neruda

Nathaly Calderón M. "And so hidden in the tide, undulant mouth of the purple sea, lips of titanic violet, the tridacna closes like a castle, and there its colossal rose devours the blue stirps that kiss it: monastery of salt, immobile heritage that imprisoned a hardened wave." "Gongorine Mollusca", Canto General Pablo Neruda, 1950 "Ocean, if I could destine my hands a measure, a fruit, a ferment of your gifts and destructions, I'd choose your distant repose, your steely lines, your extension guarded by air and night, and the energy of your white language that destroys and topples its columns in its own shattered purity." "The Great Ocean", Canto General Pablo Neruda, 1950 R egarding the Malacological Section from an ecological and environmental point of view allows us to notice new characteristics of the collection, features in direct dialogue with science. On one hand, this repository invites us to be aware of the infinite diversity of marine species inhabiting the oceans, and the role each one of them plays within the ecosystem. The multiplicity Acidification of the Oceans and Its Effect on Biodiversity: New Approaches Regarding Neruda’s Collection 110 universidad de chile

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