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How humans are manipulating the natural world : Goats and Soda : NPR

A champagne breakfast is served as part of an “Africa experience” offered by a Kenya hotel.

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Since 2019, we’ve covered the debate among geologists over whether to dub our current epoch the “Anthropocene” by the measurable mark we’ve made — through mining, deforestation, building and nuclear bombs — on the geologic record. The term comes from the Greek, anthropos, meaning human. Top geologists voted against that last year, but the decision hasn’t stopped photographers from using the term as a frame to explore humans’ relationship to the world we’re remaking. This story is part of our series “following up” on past articles.

Photographer Zed Nelson is fixated on the anthropocene, even if it’s not an official geologic epoch.

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“Just as a term, it’s a really useful way of focusing the mind on the fact that we humans are having a dramatic effect in a very, very short period of time,” he says. On a macro scale, that effect has been well-documented by photographers, with aerial shots of waterways clogged with plastic, the scars on barren land from deforestation and countless smokestacks spewing pollution into the air.

But to him, such work has ceased to elicit the same shock it once did.

“We learn to ignore stuff quite quickly,” he says. “I wanted to come at the subject from a kind of sideways angle.”

That sideways angle is reflected in Nelson’s new book The Anthropocene Illusion, which focuses less on humans’ destruction of nature but more on how that destruction is warping our relationship with the natural world.

Railway bridge. Nairobi National Park.Kenya Nairobi National Park, established in 1946, is the only national park in the world bordering a major capital city. Home to lions, rhinos, giraffe and the remnants of a once-thriving wildebeest migration, the park has faced increasing pressure from urban expansion and infrastructure projects. The Chinese-built Nairobi-Mombasa railway now cuts through the park on an elevated bridge, prioritising cost-saving over conservation. Further developments, including proposed hotels and fencing plans, threaten to sever the park from critical wildlife corridors, turning a once-open ecosystem into an enclosed and managed space.

Railway bridge, Nairobi National Park, Kenya. The park, established in 1946, is home to lions, rhinos, giraffe and the remnants of a once-thriving wildebeest migration. Bordering a major capital city, the park has faced increasing pressure from urban expansion and infrastructure projects. The Chinese-built Nairobi-Mombasa railway cuts through the park on an elevated bridge.

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Nelson spent six years traveling to 14 different countries, visiting national parks, theme parks, zoos and hotels to capture images illustrating the contrived and paradoxical ways we relate to our altered Earth.

“As we divorce ourselves as a species from our connections with the natural world, and wreak havoc on it, we’ve become very clever at creating this illusion, which are these choreographed, hyper-managed, curated versions of nature.”

Nelson visits Kenya, where tourists can pay to recreate a scene from the movie Out of Africa.

Out of Africa champagne picnic experience. Masai Mara luxury safari. Kenya’s national parks and reserves offer tourists the chance to see wild animals in what remains of their natural habitat. In Masai Mara, tourists engage in colonial fantasies while re-enacting the romantic picnic scene in the film Out of Africa. Local Masaai tribesman are employed to provide picturesque authenticity to the experience. Earth’s wildlife populations have plunged by an average of 69% in the last 50 years; 90% of African elephants have been wiped out in the past century. Kenyan national parks provide a sanctuary, but the animals living within them are allowed to survive essentially for human entertainment and reassurance. These animals become, in effect, performers for paying tourists eager to see a nostalgic picture-book image of the natural world.

The “Out of Africa champagne picnic” offered by a Kenya resort lets tourist re-enact the picnic scene from the movie, complete with (hired) Masaai tribesmen. It’s part of a luxury safari.

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“The safari outfit lays out the rug, carries an ancient gramophone player, puts the champagne ice bucket, brings a Maasai warrior to stand close by to add authenticity to the scene,” says Nelson. “The Maasai is paid. That particular guy, he’s a super nice guy, I’m Instagram friends with him now.”

In Sri Lanka, Nelson stood back from a popular Instagram spot where well-to-do tourists to snap selfies in an infinity pool against a backdrop of seemingly wild elephants. “It’s actually the largest captive herd of elephants in the world,” says Nelson. “They bring these elephants down to the river every day, and the large males are chained by the ankle and the chains are fixed to the rocks under water.”

Elephant Bay Hotel. Pinnawalla, Sri Lanka The elephants viewed by tourists from the swimming pool of the Elephant Bay Hotel are part of the largest captive herd in the world, brought to the river twice daily from the nearby Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage. For $16 tourists can visit the elephant orphanage, and pay an extra fee to “wash” and pose next to an elephant in the river. Established in 1975, the Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage was initially founded to provide care and sanctuary to orphaned and injured elephants. Over several decades it has grown into a tourist attraction. Despite its stated benevolent mission, the facility has faced increasing criticism about animal welfare and commercial exploitation – for breeding its captive elephants and using sharp steel hooks on long poles to control and train the elephants. While the human population of Sri Lanka has more than doubled in number since 1960, the nation’s elephant population has fallen by almost 65% since the turn of the 19th century. Human conflict with elephants is a major issue. As human settlements expand, elephant habitats are being fragmented and destroyed, forcing elephants to venture into human areas to find food and water. Elephants are often killed by farmers using methods such as electric fences, snares and poisoning to protect their crops.

Hotel Elephant Bay, Pinnawala, Sri Lanka. From the swimming pool, tourists can view elephants that are brought to the river from the herd from at the nearby Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage, established care for orphaned and injured animals.

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The national parks Nelson visited “are very real,” he says, “but it’s a demarcated zone for the last survivors of these species, corralled into ever-decreasing areas where we go to see them, ultimately to be reassured that they still exist.” That creates a kind of illusion, he says, that can give us a kind of peace of mind while we continue destroying these habitats.

Rhesus macaque monkey. Longleat Safari Park. UK. The first drive-through safari park outside of Africa, Longleat opened in 1966 as a way to boost the finances of the Marquess of Bath’s struggling estate. The park is home to 500 animals across 120 species. One of the attractions is the Monkey Drive-Through, where rhesus macaques interact freely with vehicles. Located within the historic grounds of Longleat House, the park faced controversy in 2014 when it was revealed that the park engaged in uncontrolled lion breeding to ensure there were always young cubs on display for visitors. As a result of concerns about in-breeding and over-population, four lion cubs were euthanised. The chief executive at the time, formerly from Legoland, was suspended and later resigned.

Rhesus macaque monkey, Longleat Adventure and Safari Park, U.K. Promoting itself as the first drive-through safari park outside of Africa, it opened in 1966 on the grounds of the Marquess of Bath’s estate and is home to 500 animals from 120 species. One attraction is the Monkey Drive-Through, where rhesus macaques interact with vehicles.

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Animals in zoos feature prominently in the project. Nelson catches some creatures looking listless in the painted facsimiles of the natural world humans plucked them from. Others look mournful.

“It’s a terrible conundrum,” he says. “Our society is driving us in one direction, but we have a sense of loss for what we’re leaving behind, so we seek out these choreographed versions to satisfy some kind of craving.”

Polar bear. Dalian Forest Zoo. China. Polar bears are the largest land carnivore in the world, weighing up to 800kg and growing up to 3 metres in length. The typical zoo enclosure for a polar bear is one-millionth the size of its range in the wild, which can reach 31,000 square miles (80,290 km²). Polar bears live in Arctic regions in Canada, Alaska, Russia, Greenland and Norway, in temperatures as low as -46°C (-50.8°F) Dalian Forest Zoo contains over 3,000 animals. Attractions include Safari Area, Rain Forest Reptile Pavilion, Flamingo Pavilion, Little Animal Village, Wild Animal Range, Swan Lake, Fierce Beast Area, Happy Primate Garden and Elephant Pavilion.

Polar bear, Dalian Forest Zoo, China. The typical zoo enclosure for a polar bear is one-millionth the size of its range in the wild, which can reach 31,000 square miles. The zoo contains over 3,000 animals.

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Nelson spent two days watching a polar bear in Dalian Forest Zoo in China. Its enclosure is meant to mimic the icy expanse of its natural arctic environment, but the stained and chipped walls betray the artifice.

“To me, that is the most depressing image in the book. It’s the most cruel manifestation of how we treat animals,” he says. “It wasn’t much of an illusion, it was just an appalling scene. The illusion almost crumbles.”

Nelson’s photos reveal the cracks in many of these illusions. An idyllic landscape mural in front of a Chinese factory does little to distract from the industrial haze. A rainforest museum exhibit looks overstuffed with an unlikely menagerie of taxidermied creatures that appear to have been encased in the museum for a bit too long.

Datong coal-fired power station. Shanxi Provence, China. China is the world's largest consumer of coal. In 2023 the country’s coal consumption reached approximately 5.13 billion tonnes. Human impact on our planet will be measurable in layered rock for millions of years to come. Future geologists will find in the sedimentary layers fallout from the burning of fossil fuels, vast deposits of cement used to build our cities, and huge concentrations of plastics.

Datong coal-fired power station, Shanxi Provence, China. Shrouded by haze, the mural depicts a landscape.

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“The irony is that all of these things that we create become unwitting monuments to the very things that we’ve lost,” says Nelson. “Our only hope is that we reassess what we value. The project for me is being a part of that conversation.”

Volcano Bay water theme Park. Florida, USA. The company’s website describes the facility as a “beach paradise” and a “South Seas oasis”. There are approximately 1,200 water parks operating across the United States and Canada, many in states that experience drought conditions, including Arizona, California and Texas.

Universal Volcano Bay, a water-themed area at Universal Orlando Resort in Orlando, Florida.

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