Doggerland - The Europe That Was
A map showing Doggerland, a region of northwest Europe home to Mesolithic people before sea level rose to inundate this area and create the Europe we are familiar with today.
Doggerland - The Europe That Was
A map showing Doggerland, a region of northwest Europe home to Mesolithic people before sea level rose to inundate this area and create the Europe we are familiar with today.
National Geographic Out of Eden Walk
▻https://www.nationalgeographic.org/projects/out-of-eden-walk/#section-2
Paul Salopek’s 21,000-mile odyssey is a decade-long experiment in slow journalism. Moving at the beat of his footsteps, Paul is walking the pathways of the first humans who migrated out of Africa in the Stone Age and made the Earth ours. Along the way he is covering the major stories of our time—from climate change to technological innovation, from mass migration to cultural survival—by giving voice to the people who inhabit them every day. His words, as well as his photographs, video, and audio, create a global record of human life at the start of a new millennium as told by villagers, nomads, traders, farmers, soldiers, and artists who rarely make the news. In this way, if we choose to slow down and observe carefully, we also can rediscover our world.
What Is ‘Slow Journalism’? | Out of Eden Walk
▻https://www.nationalgeographic.org/projects/out-of-eden-walk/blogs/lab-talk/2017-02-what-slow-journalism
photo du marcheur, ▻https://seenthis.net/messages/699216
A Walk Through Time
This map visualizes the estimated timeline of early human migration out of our ancestral African “Eden” and across the globe.
▻https://www.nationalgeographic.org/projects/out-of-eden-walk/media/2013-01-a-walk-through-time/?sf178629035=1
In 2013 a reporter set out to retrace our ancestors’ global migration.
On foot.
Why?
▻https://www.nationalgeographic.org/projects/out-of-eden-walk
Journal de marche,… #photos (bon, c’est le National Geographic, mais quand même …
Dans le chapitre 4, Silk Roads,
▻https://www.nationalgeographic.org/projects/out-of-eden-walk/the-journey/chapters/4-silk-roads
The Great Green Wall - National Geographic Society
▻https://www.nationalgeographic.org/news/great-green-wall
Land degradation typically stems from both human-related and natural factors; overfarming, overgrazing, climate change, and extreme weather are the most common causes. Beyond affecting land and the natural environment, land degradation poses serious threats to agricultural productivity, food security, and quality of life. Nowhere is this issue more urgent than in sub-Saharan Africa, where an estimated 500 million people live on land undergoing desertification, the most extreme form of land degradation.
#climat #désertification #sécheresse #agriculture #élevage #grande_muraille_verte #Afrique #cartographie #sol