coal: fragments of energy and life
The coal is a legacy of Earth's past, written in black fragments of his bowels. They preserve the energy that plants captured from the Sun 200 million years ago, and which, converted into chemical energy, remains intact to this day.
It is an heritage of energy generously bequeathed by our planet. We have been ungrateful, and have simply pulled it out of the ground to burn, without a second look at the medium- and long-term consequences for its health.
Pieces of energy and life, located in tiny corners of our microcosm, expressed as minuscule traces that tell us about extinct plant species, buried among its rich funerary treasures of vital energy, obtained from the particles carrying sunlight.
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