Eduardo Saavedra Rojas (1 October 1909 â 29 July 1970) was a Chilean military officer, engineer and academic. He reached the rank of general in the Chilean Army and served as director of the Military Geographic Institute. He was noted for his participation in geopolitical and geographic projects relevant to Chile, such as the construction of the General Bernardo O'Higgins Riquelme Base in Antarctica, the defense of the Chilean thesis on the division between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans in the south, and the cartographic study on the location of the Encuentro River and its origin.
He was the son of Rafael AnÃÂbal Saavedra Almeyda and Ernestina Rojas Alcayaga, and was born on 1 October 1909 in the city of Antofagasta. He entered the Military Academy, where he began his career in the Chilean Army. From his early years of service he specialized in military engineering, standing out for his technical training and leadership ability. He was a relative of Cornelio Saavedra RodrÃÂguez.
During his military career he participated in several initiatives related to geography, geopolitics and territorial delimitation. His technical and strategic work led him to collaborate in projects considered relevant for Chile's territorial projection. On 29 December 1929 he was promoted to the rank of officer and on 6 September 1961 to brigadier general of infantry, retiring from the army on 9 February 1962. He also taught in the Topography program at the University of Talca.
One of the milestones of his career was his participation in the construction project of the General Bernardo O'Higgins Riquelme Base in the territory claimed by Chile in Antarctica. The project was promoted by the Army high command as part of a strategy to consolidate Chilean sovereignty in Antarctica.
Saavedra participated in the planning and execution of this initiative, facing the difficulties inherent in establishing a base in an extreme environment with limited resources. The base later became one of the principal Chilean presences in Antarctica. He was in charge of the second Chilean Antarctic expedition in December 1947, which included a night expedition to the Weddell Sea in which Miguel Serrano Fernández participated.
In 1954 he was appointed to represent Chile at the 10th Assembly of the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics, held in Rome. There he defended the Chilean thesis that the natural division between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans in the south should be located along the arc of the Scotia Arc.
He later also participated in scientific meetings held in Paris in 1955 concerning geodetic and geographic matters.
He was appointed chief delegate of the Chilean Boundary Commission during a particularly complex period in ChileanâÂÂArgentine border relations. In that context he prepared a technical study on the delimitation in the Alto Palena area, which was presented before the ChileanâÂÂArgentine Mixed Boundary Commission.
His proposal corrected several existing cartographic errors, including the location of the Encuentro River, and was later confirmed by the 1966 British arbitration in the border dispute, playing a key role in it. He argued that the mountain that forms the source of the river was Cerro Central, actually referring to the nearby Picacho de la Virgen, rather than the mountain of the same name located to the southwest.
The Chilean members of the mixed commission, besides Saavedra, were Colonel Raúl Figueroa MartÃÂnez, Octavio Flores Castlli and General Daniel Urra Fuentes. On the Argentine side were General Otto Helbling, president of the commission, and the delegates Samuel Dvoskin and Major Gonzalo Gómez.
Daniel Urra was criticized and called a "traitor to the fatherland" and "sold to Argentine gold" for having supported the Argentine thesis before Saavedra's presentation.
He was later appointed director of the Military Geographic Institute, a position he held between 1956 and 1962. During his tenure the institution strengthened its technical and scientific prestige and expanded its international recognition.
After retiring from the army he continued working as an engineer and devoted himself to university teaching. For several years he traveled regularly to the University of Talca to teach and direct the Topography program.
He died on 29 July 1970 in Santiago. His death prompted expressions of mourning in military and academic circles. He was a member of the Instituto de Conmemoración Histórica de Chile.