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Micro-Landscapes of the AnthropoceneMain MenuMarginal WorldsPlant WorldsAnimal WorldsAmy Huang, Natasha Stavreski and Rose RzepaWatery WorldsInsect WorldsBird-Atmosphere WorldsContributed by Gemma and MerahExtinctionsMarginal WorldsSam, Zach and AlexE-ConceptsAn emergent vocabulary of eco-concepts for the late AnthropoceneSigi Jöttkandt4115726eb75e75e43252a5cbfc72a780d0304d7d
Had this picture been coloured sandy brown instead of snowy white, one would be excused that he or she is on a plane looking down on the ancient citadel of Aleppo rather than the seracs on the Tasman Glacier in NZ near Mt. Cook (2015).
Seracs (from Swiss French sérac, originally the name of a compact white cheese) are house-size blocks of glacial ice, sometimes with their own 'entrances', 'windows' and 'rooms'. They are formed by intersecting and widening crevasses on the glacier.
Crevasses, in turn, are formed when glacial ice sheets are fractured by horizontal and vertical shearing forces when the glacier glides downstream. When these crevasses become wide enough, they form 'lanes' and 'streets'. Sometimes, snow would bridge over the tops of seracs, turning them into caves or tunnels. This is a village sculpted by nature's hands; and is capable of constant metamorphosis, despite not being organic and alive – the touchstone of new materialism.
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12021-03-03T23:28:27-08:00Sigi Jöttkandt4115726eb75e75e43252a5cbfc72a780d0304d7dChapter 6 The Ego - Eco Binary Through Ceramic ArtSigi Jöttkandt46John Wplain2021-04-24T19:55:22-07:00Sigi Jöttkandt4115726eb75e75e43252a5cbfc72a780d0304d7d