Footprints in the Mud of Agadem

Petrified footprints of now extinct rhinos and those of humans in the mud of the former lake Agadem may symbolise the beginning of an epoch dominated by humans. How could such a “local” Anthropocene be defined? In eastern Niger, two aspects seem particularly important for answering this question. T...

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Main Author: Tilman Musch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Hradec Králové 2018-01-01
Series:Modern Africa
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uhk.cz/modernafrica/article/view/127
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author Tilman Musch
author_facet Tilman Musch
author_sort Tilman Musch
collection DOAJ
description Petrified footprints of now extinct rhinos and those of humans in the mud of the former lake Agadem may symbolise the beginning of an epoch dominated by humans. How could such a “local” Anthropocene be defined? In eastern Niger, two aspects seem particularly important for answering this question. The first is the disappearance of the addax in the context of the megafauna extinction. The second is the question how the “natural” environment may be conceived by the local Teda where current Western discussions highlight the “hybridity” of space.
format Article
id doaj-art-e484e19089d84c3fa0eac51ec8e8f5fd
institution DOAJ
issn 2336-3274
2570-7558
language English
publishDate 2018-01-01
publisher University of Hradec Králové
record_format Article
series Modern Africa
spelling doaj-art-e484e19089d84c3fa0eac51ec8e8f5fd2025-08-20T02:56:59ZengUniversity of Hradec KrálovéModern Africa2336-32742570-75582018-01-015210.26806/modafr.v5i2.198Footprints in the Mud of AgademTilman Musch0University of Bayreuth Petrified footprints of now extinct rhinos and those of humans in the mud of the former lake Agadem may symbolise the beginning of an epoch dominated by humans. How could such a “local” Anthropocene be defined? In eastern Niger, two aspects seem particularly important for answering this question. The first is the disappearance of the addax in the context of the megafauna extinction. The second is the question how the “natural” environment may be conceived by the local Teda where current Western discussions highlight the “hybridity” of space. https://journals.uhk.cz/modernafrica/article/view/127AnthropoceneTedaSpaceConservationaddax
spellingShingle Tilman Musch
Footprints in the Mud of Agadem
Modern Africa
Anthropocene
Teda
Space
Conservation
addax
title Footprints in the Mud of Agadem
title_full Footprints in the Mud of Agadem
title_fullStr Footprints in the Mud of Agadem
title_full_unstemmed Footprints in the Mud of Agadem
title_short Footprints in the Mud of Agadem
title_sort footprints in the mud of agadem
topic Anthropocene
Teda
Space
Conservation
addax
url https://journals.uhk.cz/modernafrica/article/view/127
work_keys_str_mv AT tilmanmusch footprintsinthemudofagadem