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The Sixth Extinction: Fonceverane Forest, Reserve Naturelle del'Astrobleme de Rochechouart-Chassenon, France. Limited Edition #1 of 12 Photograph

Jon Wyatt

United Kingdom

Photography, Gelatin on Paper

Size: 24 W x 20 H x 0.1 D in

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ABOUT THE ARTWORK

Fonceverane Forest, Reserve Naturelle del'Astrobleme de Rochechouart-Chassenon, France. The meteorite was a mile across and is thought to have been a vital contributing factor to the extinction event. At the moment of impact it carried a force 14 million times that of the Hiroshima bomb. The Sixth Extinction Life on earth has been disrupted by five ‘mass extinction events’, the worst of which wiped out 95% of all life. Current rising carbon dioxide levels and rates of species extinction have led scientists to conclude that the planet is now experiencing a sixth mass extinction event. In 2011 the latest clues to the cause of a mass extinction event brought leading paleogeologists to North Somerset in the UK’s Westcountry. Here the cliffs and foreshores contained an inch-thick layer of rarely-exposed buff-coloured limestone - a layer of the fossil record below which life teemed, but above which most of the planet’s species simply vanished. I followed the team of paleogeologists as they pursued the two hundred million year old mystery. Adopting the same locations, I examined local historical and environmental records, hunting back through the spans of geological time for traces of other extinct ecosystems, transient echoes of the mass extinction. Photographing the residue that remains in the alchemy of the rocks or the shadows of the undergrowth, each image in the project reflects a particular ecosystem ‘die-off’. From the debris of a meteorite strike to the tell-tale traces of lethal sea level fluctuations; from the geomorphic evidence of the UK’s worst natural disaster to the traces of vanished communities and the footprints of Neolithic man. These ecosystems have dissipated to a new strata of dust, awaiting rediscovery by future paleogeologists. Clues to mass extinction events yet to come. Silver gelatin prints on Ilford resin-coated paper (pearl finish). Paper size: 24 x 20 in. Image size: 20.2 x 15.1 in. Edition of 12 + 2A/P’s

DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS
Photography:

Gelatin on Paper

Artist Produced Limited Edition of:

12

Size:

24 W x 20 H x 0.1 D in

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Jon Wyatt

Jon Wyatt

United Kingdom

Award-winning British photographer Jon Wyatt's work documents the growing detachment of modern cultures from our physical landscape. Landscape photography is used to document landscape issues. Through a lens of landscape iconography, his projects address issues of earth science and ecosystem transition, conservation and ecology, and the ethics of land use and ownership.

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