Permissions
Three Holes: In the Geological Present, essay by Seth Denizen
Fig. 01. En construcción (Under Construction), directed by José Luis Guerín (2001). Courtesy of Ovideo TV.
Fig. 02. Hiroshi Sugimoto, Ordovician Period Photo (1994). Photo 81 x 71 cm. © Hiroshi Sugimoto, courtesy Pace Gallery.
Fig. 03. Hiroshi Sugimo, Earliest Human Relatives (1994). Photo 81 x 71 cm. © Hiroshi Sugimoto, courtesy Pace Gallery.
Fig. 05. J. C. Farman, B. G. Gardiner and J. D. Shanklin, “Large Losses of Total Ozone in Antarctica Reveal Seasonal ClOx/NOx Interaction,” Nature 315 (May 1985): 207–210.
Fig. 07. From F. A. Fallou, Pedologie oder Allgemeine und besondere Bodenkunde (Dresden: Schöenfeld, 1862), in Alfred E. Hartemink, “The Depiction of Soil Profiles since the Late 1700s,” Catena 79 (2009): 113–127.
Fig. 09. Venezia 2003, Societa Italiana di Geologia Ambientale. Scale = 1:50,000.
Fig. 10. Seth Denizen, “Adams Family Series,” Eighth Approximation: Urban Soil in the Anthropocene (MLA Thesis: University of Virginia, 2012). Copyright retained by the author/designer.
Fig. 11. Seth Denizen, “Robert Moses Series,” Eighth Approximation: Urban Soil in the Anthropocene (MLA Thesis: University of Virginia, 2012). Copyright retained by the author/designer.
Episodes from a History of Scalelessness: William Jerome Harrison and Geological Photography, essay by Adam Bobbette
Fig. 01. H.T. Hildage, “Mining Operations in New York City and Vicinity,T” in Transactions of the American Institute of Mining Engineers (New York: Institute of Mining Engineers, 1908), 392, Fig. 18.
Fig. 02. G. Bingley, Baldersby Park, near Thirsk. Large Boulder of Carboniferous Grit, 1891. Courtesy of the British Geological Survey. © NERC. All rights reserved.
Fig. 03. From John A., Dresser and T. C. Denis, Geology of Quebec (Quebec: Rédempti, 1944), Plate v.
Fig. 04. William Jerome Harrison, Sheringham Beach. Paramoudra in Chalk, 1886. Courtesy of the British Geological Survey. © NERC. All rights reserved.
Fig. 05. William Jerome Harrison, Beeston Beach. Paramoudra, 1886. Courtesy of the British Geological Survey. © NERC. All rights reserved.
Fig. 06. William Jerome Harrison, W. of Sheringham. Pinnacle of Chalk, embedded in drift, 1886. Courtesy of the British Geological Survey. © NERC. All rights reserved.
Inquiries and Interpretations Concerning the Observations and Findings from Atmosphere-Investigating, Landscape-Exploring, Universe-Tracking Instruments, their Experiments, Studies, Etc., design project by Emily Cheng
Copyright retained by the author/designer.
Landscapes of San Francisco Bay: Plates from Bay Lexicon, design project by Jane Wolff
Copyright retained by the author/designer.
Architecture’s Lapidarium: On the Lives of Geological Specimens, essay by Amy Catania Kulper
Fig. 02. Ferdinand Cheval, Palais Idéal (1879-1912), Louis-Ernest Barrias, Nature Unveiling Herself Before Science (1899), John Collier, Priestess of Delphi (1891), Sir Edward Coley Burne-Jones, Sisyphus (c. 1870).
Fig. 05. Joseph Michael Gandy, Architecture: Its Natural Mode (1838).
Fig. 06. Joseph Michael Gandy, from Architecture: Its Natural Mode (1838).
Fig. 07. Joseph Michael Gandy, A Selection of Parts of Buildings, Public and Private, Erected from the Designs of John Soane (1818).
Fig. 09. Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Foundations of the Theater of Marcellus, from Antichità Romane (1756). From the Collection of the Toledo-Lucas County Public Library.
Fig. 10. Piranesi, “Mausoleum of Cecilia Matella,” from Antichità Romane (1756). From the Collection of the Toledo-Lucas County Public Library.
Fig. 11. Athanasius Kircher, The Eruption of Mount Etna, 1637, from Mundus Subterraneus (1664).
Fig. 12. Basil Valentine, The Twelve Keys (1678), Ernst Rutherford in his Laboratory. Ernst Rutherford and Hans Geiger, Physics Laboratory. Manchester University, England. Marsden, Lady Joyce: Assorted photographs and negatives from the papers of Sir Ernest Marsden. Ref: PA Coll-0091-1-011.Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand.
Fig. 13. Athanasius Kircher, detail from Pictorial Stones with Human Faces (1664).
Erratic Imaginaries: Thinking Landscape as Evidence, essay by Jane Hutton
Fig. 01. Kidston Lake Rocking Stone, Kidstone Lake, Nova Scotia. Gardner Collection of Photographs, Harvard College Library.
Fig. 02. Pierre des Marmettes, from Jean De Charpentier, Essai Sur Les Glaciers et Sur le Terrain Erratique du Bassin du Rhone (Lausanne: Imprimerie et Librairie de Marc Ducloux, 1841).
Fig. 03. Postcard, Pierre des Marmettes, (1905) R. Heyraudt, Publisher, St. Maurice, collection of Vincent Franzen.
Fig. 04. Postcard, Rollstone Boulder, Fitchburg, Massachusetts Peter Cristofono collection.
Fig. 05. Babson Boulders Map. Courtesy of Jane Hutton.
Fig. 06. Babson Boulder, Courage, Dogtown, Massachusetts. Courtesy of Jane Hutton.
Fig. 07. Medicine or Prayer Rock, Ipswich, South Dakota Photo courtesy of J. Stephen Conn.
Fig. 08. Postcard, Massasoit Statue, Portico over Plymouth Rock, The Mayflower. 1930-45. The Tichnor Borthers Collection, Boston Public Library.
Fig. 09. National Day of Mourning plaque, Plymouth, Massachusetts Photo courtesy of Gerald Azenaro.
Utopia on Ice: The Climate as Commodity Form, essay by Mark Dorrian
This essay is reprinted, with some modifications, with the permission of Cabinet magazine; it first appeared in Issue 47 - Logistics, pp. 25-32.
Fig. 01. Promotional image from the indefinitely postponed Sunny Mountain Ski Dome project, Dubai.
Fig. 02. Image from Buckminster Fuller and Shoji Sadao’s “Cloud Nine” project, ca. 1960. Courtesy of the Estate of Buckminster Fuller.
Fig. 03. Rainmakers Irving Langmuir, Vincent Schaefer, and Bernard Vonnegut at work on cloud seeding in a GE Laboratory. 1947.
Fig. 04. Promotional Poster for Dubailand.
Fig. 05. Airborne Laputa preparing to menace the citizens of Balnibarbi. From a 1930 edition of Gulliver’s Travels [Whistler Laputa]. ©Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York/ DACS, London.
In the Furnace of Disorientation: Tragic Drama and the Liturgical Force of Metal, essay by Guy Zimmerman
Fig. 01. A. Ramage and P. Craddock, King Croesus Gold, Archaeological Exploration of Sardis Monograph 11 (Cambridge, Mass.: 2000), Fig. 4.28. ©Archaeological Exploration of Sardis/Harvard University.
Fig. 02. Archaeoloical Research at Aphrodisias in Caria, 1994. R.R.R. Smith, Chrisopher Ratte, American Journal of Archeology, 100, no. 1 (January 1996), Fig. 23. Courtesy of Archaeological Institute of America/American Journal of Archaeology.
Fig. 03. A. Ramage and P. Craddock, King Croesus Gold Archaeological, Exploration of Sardis Monograph 11 (Cambridge, Mass.: 2000), Fig. 10. 1. ©Archaeological Exploration of Sardis/Harvard University.
Fig. 04. Archaeoloical Research at Aphrodisias in Caria, 1994. R. R. R. Smith, Christopher Ratte, America Journal of Archeology, Vol. 100, No. 1 (Jan., 1996), Fig. 23. Courtesy of Archaeological Institute of America/American Journal of Archaeology.
Fig. 05. G. M. A. Hanfmann, Sardis from Prehistoric to Roman Times (Cambridge Mass., 1983), fig. 55 (reconstruction). ©Archaeological Exploration of Sardis/Harvard University.
Tar Creek Supergrid, design project by Amy Norris and Clinton Langevin
Copyright retained by the author/designer.
The Geological Imperative: Notes on the Political-Ecology of Amazonia’s Deep History, essay by Paulo Tavares
Fig. 01. Still from the The Ax Fight, 1975. Courtesy of Documentary Educational Resources, Inc.
Fig. 02. Cover of the report on Amazonia published by Davis Shelton and Robert Matthews, 1976.
Fig. 03. Operation Amazonia: the overlapping between natural and political territories. Map by Paolo Tavares.
Fig. 04. Operation Amazonia: The overlap between natural and political territories.
Fig. 05. SLAR remote sensing image of the south-central regions of the basin.
Figs. 06 – 09. Samples of the cartographic inventory produced by RADAM. Courtesy of IBGE - Brazilian Geographic Institute.
Fig. 10. Continental urban-matrix as planned in the Plan for National Integration, 1970. Courtesy of INCRA – National Institute for Colonization and Agrarian Reform.
Fig. 11. Transamazônica Highway. Manchete Magazine, 1973.
Figs. 12 – 15. Sample images of the RADAM catalogue describing field-work research. Courtesy of IBGE - Brazilian Geographic Institute.
Fig. 16. First page of Norman Lewis reportage published in the Sunday Times in 1969.
Fig. 17. Still frames of the film archive of the SPI. Courtesy of the Museu do Índio, Brasil.
Fig. 18. The white peace: sample pages of a report disclosed from the archives of FUNAI.
Fig. 20. Geoglyphs, an urban forest. Courtesy of Diego Gurgel.
Fig. 21. Terra-preta: black-earth soils, anthropogenic in origin.