Hardy scientists trek to Venezuela’s last glacier amid chaos

This Feb. 20, 2019 photo shows a photo print of scientist Luis Daniel Llambi, center left, holding a poster that reads in Spanish, “Salary Increase now!! We are eating herbs!” inside an almost empty laboratory at the Andes University in Merida, Venezuela. Mountain fieldwork always is physically grueling, but the deepening crisis in Venezuela since the death of former president Hugo Chavez in 2013 has transformed even simple tasks into immense hurdles. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

In this Feb. 18, 2019 photo, from left, scientists Luis Daniel Llambi, Cherry Andrea Rojas, Mariana Cardenas and Alejandra Melfo, prepare for a mission to study how temperatures and plant life are changing in the Andean ecosystem known as the paramos _ a mist-covered mountain grassland that lies between the top of the treeline and the bottom of the Humboldt glacier, in Merida, Venezuela. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

In this Feb. 19, 2019 photo, the bones of an animal lie on a rock during a scientific mission to study how temperatures and plant life are changing in the Andean ecosystem known as the paramos _ a mist-covered mountain grassland that lies between the top of the treeline and the bottom of the Humboldt glacier, in Merida, Venezuela. A team of scientists in Venezuela is trying to weather the political and economic crisis engulfing their country to record what happens as Venezuela’s last glacier vanishes. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

MERIDA, Venezuela — Blackouts shut off the refrigerators where the scientists keep their lab samples. Gas shortages mean they sometimes have to work from home. They even reuse sheets of paper to record field data because fresh supplies are so scarce.

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