Chile.science available via email

Jarom Smith (jarom@dcc.dcc.uchile.cl)
Mon, 13 Jun 1994 15:15:34 GMT

Scientists:

It has come to our attention that chile.science, although distributed
worldwide, is not carried by news servers at some locations. Therefore,
There are many people who are not able to read chile.science through their
(standardly configured) local news readers.

Due to all these complications, we are have created a listserv news
list (similar to chile.chile-l) which will allow users to receive
postings to chile.science via email. To subscribe to chile.science via
email, send an email message to "listserver@dcc.uchile.cl" with the
message "subscribe chile.science <your email address>". For example,
if I were to subscribe, I would send the message "subscribe
chile.science jarom@dcc.uchile.cl" For those who are unfamiliar with
listservers, a complete help file may be obtained by sending the
one-line message "help" to listserver@dcc.uchile.cl.

Thank you,

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Jarom Smith University of Chile, Santiago
jarom@dcc.uchile.cl chile.science newsgroup project
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(For reference)
Creation of newsgroup chile.science:

In an effort to encourage collaboration between Chilean and U.S.
scientists, a newsgroup called chile.science has been created for
the purpose of information exchange both within the Chilean scientific
community and between this community and scientists elsewhere on the Internet.

For those of you familiar with, working in, or planning work in
Chile, it is hoped that you will make extensive use of
chile.science to (A) inform each other of the news and happenings
(cruises, conferences, field trips, projects etc.) that might be
developed into fuller cooperative efforts, (B) exchange ideas and
views on how science opportunities in Chile may be used and
developed to obtain their fullest potential, and (C) report
opportunities for, and results from, scientific work in and around
Chile.

For those of you not familiar with Chile, there is both great depth
and high potential for rewarding cooperative science in the
country. For example, Chilean scientists have strong research
interests in the Antarctic, Astronomy, Biology and Biotechnology,
Agriculture and Aquaculture, Forestry, Fisheries, Oceanography,
Medicine, Geology-Mining, and other fields of science and
technology. In addition, Chile has a booming economy which is being
reinvested to strengthen the scientific community's abilities for
the approaching technology-rich century. Field access is rapid
and extensive throughout the contry, almost all of the country is
on digital switched telecommunications, and Chile exchanges more
EMAIL internationally than all other countries in South America
combined. Moreover, Chile provides a perhaps unparalleled natural
laboratory from which to study (and provide ground truth) for
troubling global environmental and climatic problems. Chile has
high alpine valleys and glacial peaks, the driest desert in the world,
and some of the finest native forests. Its length provides access to a
cross section of world climate from 18 to 56 degrees south, and on south
with its bases in the Antarctic. All of this comes with a strong
scientific community that can support and collaborate on the
long-term studies necessary to produce data on ozone depletion,
desertification, ocean processes, and climate changes that future
generations and governments will need to analyze and accommodate
civilization's impact on the environment.

Therefore, please take full advantage of chile.science as a
convenient point of cotact with Chilean science and scientists,
and, we hope, help this newsgroup become a place from which we
expand and open some really rewarding mutual research
opportunities. Please DO ccontact us individually and DO use
chile.science. Make us a regular CC for your announcements on
topics of global and Chilean interest and happenings. Explore
through chile.science what has been, what is, and what will continue to
be a productive scientific environment here in Chile.

We suggest that contributions to the news group always place
one or two leadoff keywords in the title in CAPS that describe the
main fields of interest of the contribution----for example
ANTARCTIC, BIOGENETICS, BIOLOGY, COMPUTER, GEOLOGY, etc.---so that
contributions are easily searchable and sortable.

Thank you,

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Jarom Smith University of Chile, Santiago
jarom@dcc.uchile.cl chile.science newsgroup project
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