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Southern skies, social storms and pestilences: astronomy and meteorology in Argentine parliamentary debates,1869-1872

Abstract

From 1869 to 1872, there was debate about bills to create the Observatorio Nacional Argentino and the Oficina Meteorológica Argentina. The proposed funding for these new national institutions, as well as their connection to public policies, were riven by conflicts inherent to that phase of the construction of the State. Some sectors opposed the bills before the Congreso Nacional, arguing that resources were scarce. President Domingo Sarmiento charged that they were allies of the previous government, which he described as “barbarous.” This article shows that the bills’ supporters stressed that they were low-cost. They achieved passage of the bills by linking their discourse with contemporary policies aimed at other concerns, such as education, immigration and epidemics.

meteorology; astronomy; Argentina; nineteenth century; Parliament

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