On "Anthorpocene -- how will it unfold" thread Dinwar wrote:
Is this really true? The mere existence of city ecologies (or biomes) which feed on human detritus is not exactly denied -- I recall dioramas in New York State Museum in Albany which showed "life in the buroughs". Why would studying them be so controversial?
Quote:
The analysis of some is essentially forbidden by our culture -- for example, I doubt any study on the ecology of cities would ever get funded, but it's going to become a major factor in the Anthropocene biosphere (cities are a new biome [or ecosystem if you prefer, but I don't, for reasons best left to a different discussion], one that will be unique to the Anthropocene, but most demand we address cities as merely destroying biomes). |
Is this really true? The mere existence of city ecologies (or biomes) which feed on human detritus is not exactly denied -- I recall dioramas in New York State Museum in Albany which showed "life in the buroughs". Why would studying them be so controversial?
via JREF Forum http://ift.tt/1oTF64E
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