Sci Art Walks

Sci Art Walks

Rewilding Tasmania: The ecological challenge of restoring Lake Pedder

54 min · 5 de sep de 2020
Portada del episodio Rewilding Tasmania: The ecological challenge of restoring Lake Pedder

Descripción

A talk by Christine Milne, Bob Brown, Distinguished Professor Jamie Kirkpatrick, Tabatha Badger, and Todd Dudley, with music by Julius Schwing and Tilly Martin. When Tasmania’s iconic Lake Pedder was flooded in 1972 to create a reservoir in the service of hydroelectric power, a unique wilderness was drowned, and now lies 15 metres beneath the surface, dormant but apparently intact. What would it take to reverse the course of history, drain the impoundment, and restore the flooded lake to its original glory? Is such a goal even ecologically possible? Meander through Tasmania’s Southwest National Park while contemplating the effort to undo our past actions and rewild our world. The suggested walking location for this episode is Lake Pedder, Southwest National Park, Tasmania. Learn more at www.sciartwalks.com.au [https://www.sciartwalks.com.au/]

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11 episodios

Portada del episodio Cultural Burning - Mona Foma Special #2

Cultural Burning - Mona Foma Special #2

In partnership with Tasmania's Mona Foma festival, an audio episode to be paired with artist Tim Coad's installation in Knocklofty Reserve, Hobart, 22-24 January 2021. Hear a special introduction in which Tim discusses his artwork, followed by a talk about Aboriginal fire culture by Andry Sculthorpe and Billy Paton-Clarke, with music by Emily Wurramara. Many Australians view fire as a destructive force, but there’s more than one type of fire. Aboriginal people have been burning this country for centuries, helping to encourage native vegetation, improve food availability for humans and animals, and restoring balance in the ecosystem. Knocklofty Reserve was a very different environment not so long ago, but when we look out at the vegetation there today, we rarely see what’s been lost and what’s misplaced. Reigniting Aboriginal fire culture in Tasmania is a crucial step towards restoring our connection to country and our ability to understand and respect our fragile habitats. The suggested walking location for this episode is Knocklofty Reserve, Hobart, Tasmania. Learn more at www.sciartwalks.com.au [https://www.sciartwalks.com.au/]

21 de ene de 20211 h 6 min
Portada del episodio Rewilding Tasmania: The ecological challenge of restoring Lake Pedder

Rewilding Tasmania: The ecological challenge of restoring Lake Pedder

A talk by Christine Milne, Bob Brown, Distinguished Professor Jamie Kirkpatrick, Tabatha Badger, and Todd Dudley, with music by Julius Schwing and Tilly Martin. When Tasmania’s iconic Lake Pedder was flooded in 1972 to create a reservoir in the service of hydroelectric power, a unique wilderness was drowned, and now lies 15 metres beneath the surface, dormant but apparently intact. What would it take to reverse the course of history, drain the impoundment, and restore the flooded lake to its original glory? Is such a goal even ecologically possible? Meander through Tasmania’s Southwest National Park while contemplating the effort to undo our past actions and rewild our world. The suggested walking location for this episode is Lake Pedder, Southwest National Park, Tasmania. Learn more at www.sciartwalks.com.au [https://www.sciartwalks.com.au/]

5 de sep de 202054 min
Portada del episodio Walk Slow, Look Low: Seeing the world from a naturalist’s perspective

Walk Slow, Look Low: Seeing the world from a naturalist’s perspective

A talk by Dr Cathy Byrne and Dr Simon Grove, with music by Warren Mason and Ben Salter. When you go for a walk in the bush, you enter the realm of small species. Insects abound in our natural world, but many of us rarely take the time to look for them or wonder about their stories. Whether you make it 100 metres out of the Remarkable Cave car park, or all the way to Crescent Bay, here’s a chance to tune into the incredible diversity and intrigue of the insect world. Full of scandal, sex, murder, and mystery, you’ll never look at a clump of leaves or rotting tree bark the same way again. The suggested walking location for this episode is Remarkable Cave to Crescent Bay, Tasman Peninsula, Tasmania. Learn more at www.sciartwalks.com.au [https://www.sciartwalks.com.au/]

31 de ago de 202052 min