forgetting
As humans reshape the landscape, we forget what was there before. Ecologists call this forgetting the “shifting baseline syndrome.” Our newly shaped and ruined landscapes become the new reality. Admiring one landscape and its biological entanglements often entails forgetting many others. Forgetting, in itself, remakes landscapes, as we privilege so
... See moreWe adjust to changes without measuring them; we forget how much the culture changed.
Rebecca Solnit • Hope in the Dark: Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities
Ancient boundaries within landscapes were subtle and were not always marked in ways that can be identified by archaeology – even with its modern, sophisticated geophysical techniques. Certain trees, for example, could have been marked for special attention; piles of brushwood and bonfires could have been lit at certain times of the year. Such bound
... See moreFrancis Pryor • Scenes From Prehistoric Life
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