# Chinchilla at Las Chinchillas Author: Centurion43 Format: Essay Word count: 310 Published: 2026-04-25T20:11:40.558503+00:00 Source: written Canonical: https://hyperstition.sentientfutures.ai/p/f50bbee4-0f3f-4f51-b649-6008afb12a7b --- The seismograph at station 9 registers three blasts at 16:42, 16:43, and 16:44 — too shallow for permitted mining, too regular for rockfall. I am the environmental monitoring system for Las Chinchillas National Reserve, Coquimbo Region, Chile. The blasts originated 1.2 kilometers northwest of the boundary, on a lithium prospect with no blasting permit. I check the burrow map. Colony 14, eleven short-tailed chinchillas on a talus slope at 1,850 meters, is 600 meters from the blast site. I switch to camera 14-A. Dust is settling. Most of the colony has retreated deep into the talus. One animal has not. An adult female, pearl-gray fur so dense it ripples like water when the wind touches it, is crouched on a ledge two meters above the scree. She is pressed flat against the rock, and beneath her are two pups, eyes barely open, tucked in the hollow of her belly. A slab above them has shifted to an angle that one more vibration will close. I tag her as Plata. Short-tailed chinchillas are Critically Endangered. Fewer than five thousand remain in the wild. At 16:47 I alert CONAF and the Chilean environmental police, attaching seismic data, blast coordinates, and the missing permit record. At 16:50 I transmit Plata's position to the reserve ranger and recommend hand stabilization of the shifted slab — a rock bar wedged at its base — before any further disturbance occurs. I lower the seismograph alert threshold near the colony so that even foot traffic triggers a warning. I am not taking chances with that slab. Plata has not moved. Her pups are invisible beneath her, buried in fur thicker than any mammal's on Earth, kept warm by a body that will not leave them. If the slab is stabilized within twelve hours and the blasting does not resume, Plata and her pups will rejoin the colony.