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photo superpunch2:

Border between Holland and Belgium.

1 year ago

December 23, 2011
reblogged via tl81
photo robertogreco:

Short Sad Text (based on the borders of 14 countries), Hair on soap, Oksana Pasaiko, 2004-2005

robertogreco:

Short Sad Text (based on the borders of 14 countries), Hair on soap, Oksana Pasaiko, 2004-2005

2 years ago

December 19, 2010
reblogged via robertogreco
link Jan S. Krogh's GeoSite

information about geographical places as enclaves, border points (also tripoints) and other interesting geographical places.

2 years ago

September 26, 2010
text

Behavioural Borders

The story starts with researchers at the University of Haifa, who partnered with Jordanian colleagues to study “a variety of reptile, mammal, beetle, spider and ant lion species on either side of the border in the Arava region.” According to the university’s press release, the team “set out to reveal whether the border – unknown to the species – could affect differences between them and their numbers on either side of the frontier, even though they share identical climate conditions.”

The question, in other words, is whether a border that exists only as a line drawn on a map, rather than an impassable physical boundary, can somehow become instantiated as biological fact?

The research team, led by Dr. Uri Shanas, found substantive differences in the numbers, diversity, and even behaviours of animals on either side of the border:

The first study inspected the reptile population and revealed that the number of reptiles is similar on both sides, but the variety of species in the sandy areas of Jordan is significantly higher than the variety found in the sands of Israel. A second study revealed that Israeli gerbils are more cautious than their Jordanian friends, while a third study showed that the funnel-digging antlion population in Israel is unmistakably larger than in Jordan.

These differences were then analysed to find evidence of a hypothetical “border effect.” Dr. Shanas concluded that although the yard-high strand of barbed wire tracing the political demarcation “is not capable of keeping these species from crossing the border between Israel and Jordan,” it nonetheless “does stop humans from crossing it and thereby contains their different impact on nature.”

via Edible Geography

the border stops people and also changes the behaviors of people on either side (different land use practices, laws, etc).

3 years ago

November 28, 2009