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The Plastocene

The Plastocene

Nature (Version 2.0)

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Tag: bears

Posted on April 10, 2020

How to Keep Returning Wildlife Wild

For the latest post on the Plastocene, I'm linking to a piece I published yesterday in The Atlantic on the complicated question of how to keep wildlife wild on a crowded planet. We go to restoration sites in Italy and the UK, before bringing the lessons back to Montana. Saving nature clearly ain't what it used to …

Continue reading "How to Keep Returning Wildlife Wild"

Posted on June 16, 2019June 17, 2019

Why Montana’s Not That Different

Jetlag gets you up early. On the first day back from a trip to Europe, I found myself alert in bed at 5.30 a.m. wondering how exactly I was going to fill the time till breakfast. A casual jog around the neighborhood would not normally be my first choice but it felt like a good …

Continue reading "Why Montana’s Not That Different"

Topics

  • aesthetics
  • Alaska
  • Albert Borgmann
  • anthropocene
  • architecture
  • Arctic
  • artisan
  • batteries
  • bears
  • biodiversity
  • biotechnology
  • bison
  • Blackfeet
  • carbon capture
  • climate
  • Climate Engineering
  • cloning
  • cloud brightening
  • CRISPR
  • de-extinction
  • earth systems
  • ecology
  • electric vehicles
  • ethics
  • Europe
  • extinction
  • fire
  • flood
  • food
  • forests
  • gardening
  • Gene Drives
  • heat
  • hurricane
  • Italy
  • justice
  • lynx
  • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Montana
  • Nanotechnology
  • nature
  • new urbanism
  • oceans
  • passenger pigeon
  • peregrine falcon
  • plastic
  • Plastocene
  • pollution
  • Pope Francis
  • primates
  • restoration
  • Rewilding
  • Rocky Mountains
  • salmon
  • ships
  • solar panels
  • solar radiation management
  • Sussex
  • Synthetic Age
  • Synthetic Biology
  • tallgrass prairie
  • technology
  • Tesla
  • Tim Cook
  • tragedy of the commons
  • transportation
  • wildlife
  • wind turbines
  • wolves
  • Yellowstone

the author

Christopher J. Preston is at various times a professor of philosophy, a commercial fisherman, a gardener, an author, and a student of powerful emerging technologies. The most inflated title he ever possessed was Distinguished Visiting Fellow in the Ethics of the Anthropocene.

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