Alpine mountain views - Adlerweg, Tirol, Austria, October 2022
photo by: nature-hiking
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Kilian Schönberger (@kilianschoenberger)
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Dome Forest Walkway - a steep, muddy trek through a dense reserve. Cicadas and insects trill so loudly, you’d swear they crept into your raincoat.
I took the stairs two at a time to get to a spectacular lookout of rolling hills that photographed as nothing more than a soft green gradient. I found myself squinting into my camera, disappointed that hundreds of my blobby landscape photos couldn’t do justice to what I was witnessing. But then I recognized that my fixation prevented me from “witnessing” anything at all.
A frequent impulse that needs to be broken by frequent reminders.
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sheathed woodtuft / kuehneromyces mutabilis
Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
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Pitlochry by Kyle Bonallo (ig: @kylebonallo)
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“I loathe that word ‘pristine.’ There have been no pristine systems on this planet for thousands of years,” says Kawika Winter, an Indigenous biocultural ecologist at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. “Humans and nature can co-exist, and both can thrive.”
For example, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) in April, a team of researchers from over a dozen institutions reported that humans have been reshaping at least three-quarters of the planet’s land for as long as 12,000 years. In fact, they found, many landscapes with high biodiversity considered to be “wild” today are more strongly linked to past human land use than to contemporary practices that emphasize leaving land untouched. This insight contradicts the idea that humans can only have a neutral or negative effect on the landscape.
Anthropologists and other scholars have critiqued the idea of pristine wilderness for over half a century. Today new findings are driving a second wave of research into how humans have shaped the planet, propelled by increasingly powerful scientific techniques, as well as the compounding crises of climate change and biodiversity loss. The conclusions have added to ongoing debates in the conservation world—though not without controversy. In particular, many discussions hinge on whether Indigenous and preindustrial approaches to the natural world could contribute to a more sustainable future, if applied more widely.
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Sunset on the Matterhorn - Alpine Haute Route, June 2021
photo by: nature-hiking
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Kilian Schönberger (@kilianschoenberger)
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I will eat you alive
I will eat you alive
And there'll be no more lies
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OLIVER JACKSON-COHEN as Will Taylor
"Happily Ever After" — Wilderness (1.01)
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