Coast Conscious

The state of Oregon is many things to various people all over. Though, to a group of individuals who reside on the coast and dedicate their lives to change, it is known as a pioneer in the growing industry of sustainable fishing: an industry created to save fish and human interest alike in an effort to clean up a historically old and often waste laden profession.

There are so many fish in the sea it is hard to imagine the ocean bare. However, at the current rate at which humans fish, this could soon be a reality. Already scores of species of fish are endangered and over-fished to exhaustion as the demand for fish worldwide is overwhelming. Currently, seafood is expensive and those prices will only go up as certain species continue to fall off the radar. Due to this issue becoming rapidly more severe it has only recently evolved into one of visible importance and, in September, I was lucky enough to meet with one of the groups taking action in Port Orford, Oregon.

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Trains of Thought on Trains

The passage starting in paragraph two on page 81 in the Norton Critical Edition of Walden by Thoreau clearly shows tension between nature and society as a train cuts through Walden Pond. However, I believe even Thoreau feels conflicted about the meeting of these two opposing forces.

The chapter is Sounds, and, early on, Thoreau establishes his intimate knowledge of this meeting ground by saying the men who work on the freight trains bow to him as to an old acquaintance. This seems to give Thoreau credibility in the eyes of the reader. Immediately before that Thoreau explains how he commonly walks the railroad causeway, using the word often, and he even says he is “related to society by this link.” The two key words that stand out here are often and related. Thoreau is careful to express the habitualness of this walk through the use of the word often and the descriptions of his mutual comfort with the men of the train. He then uses the word related, a word commonly used to describe a familial connection to refer to the track. I believe this paragraph shows Thoreau’s uses for the meeting of the two worlds and paints them in a positive light. Continue reading

The Sublime Deep

On March 25th, 2012, James Cameron, the director behind Avatar and Titanic, traveled to the bottom of Challenger Deep, the deepest point of the Mariana Trench at almost 7 miles total. Equipped with a one man submersible eight years in the making, he was able to stay at the bottom for over six hours in order to collect 3D footage and other available samples. However, a trip such as this doesn’t come cheap. The last eight years have cost Cameron vast amounts of money as he has personally paid for the construction of his sub, the first of its kind. On top of that he has spent these last few years perfecting the sub and putting it through many trails in order to maximize its ability to collect useful data as well as bring him back alive. The pressure at this depth can kill a human instantly were there a single leak in the structure of the sub so there is no room for error. Man certainly does not have dominion at these depths.

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