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Isotopes in the Garden a Narrative of the Atomic Age and its Legacy in the Global Landscape

机译:花园中的同位素-原子时代的叙事及其在全球景观中的遗产

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摘要

The following is a narrative, which explores the age of nuclear enlightenment---or the Atomic Age---and its physical ramifications within the landscape. This era---starting with the discovery of radioactivity in 1898 and continuing through today---began with a belief in progress towards a brighter tomorrow, but ended in destructive actions that will continue to decay within our soils and bones for millions of years into the future. Following the stories of key people, such as Marie Curie, Robert Oppenheimer, and Edward Teller, this thesis tells a story, which even though it is historically recent, it is unknown to people of the millennial generation---those born from the early 1980s through the early 2000s. To tell the story, the thesis draws upon science, politics, history, and pop-culture and employs a specific representation technique that draws from mid-twentieth century movie animation. Based upon the author's own experiences, the thesis argues that the millennial generation is less informed of, less motivated by, or less interested in the legacies of the Atomic Age. Ultimately, the thesis seeks to remedy this detachment from this historically relevant narrative. To do this, the thesis explores the physical ramifications of nuclear ingenuity over the last 120 years, which has resulted in the unintentional and global spread of radioactive isotopes via atmospheric nuclear weapons testing and nuclear meltdowns. This radioactive debris has become embedded within our earth's crust, plants, animals, and bodies, where it will decay for millions of years into the future. This paper hopes to engage the readers with this reality and transform their perspective of this age from a distant past to an imminent present and future.
机译:下面是一个叙述,探讨了核启蒙时代或原子时代及其在景观中的物理影响。这个时代-从1898年发现放射性开始一直延续到今天-怀着对朝着更光明的明天前进的信念,但以破坏性行动告终,这种破坏性行动将在我们的土壤和骨骼中持续腐烂数百万年走向未来。继玛丽·居里(Marie Curie),罗伯特·奥本海默(Robert Oppenheimer)和爱德华·泰勒(Edward Teller)等关键人物的故事之后,本论文讲了一个故事,尽管这是历史悠久的,但对于千禧一代的人来说却是未知的-这些故事源于早期1980年代到2000年代初期。为了讲述这个故事,论文借鉴了科学,政治,历史和流行文化,并采用了一种特殊的表示技术,该技术取自20世纪中叶的电影动画。基于作者自身的经验,论文认为,千禧一代对原子时代的遗产的了解较少,受其动机较少或对其兴趣不大。最终,本文力图纠正这种与历史相关叙事的分离。为此,本文探讨了过去120年间核创造力的物理影响,这种影响导致放射性同位素通过大气核武器试验和核灾难而无意地在全球范围内扩散。这种放射性碎片已嵌入我们地壳,植物,动物和身体中,并将​​在未来数百万年的时间内腐烂。本文希望使读者认识到这一现实,并将他们对这个时代的看法从遥远的过去转变为即将到来的现在和未来。

著录项

  • 作者

    Young, Thomas Joseph.;

  • 作者单位

    Rutgers The State University of New Jersey - New Brunswick.;

  • 授予单位 Rutgers The State University of New Jersey - New Brunswick.;
  • 学科 Landscape architecture.;World history.;Nuclear physics and radiation.
  • 学位 M.L.A.
  • 年度 2017
  • 页码 126 p.
  • 总页数 126
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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