7/6/2023 0 Comments Lake natron stone human![]() ![]() He also contributes two essays summing up his photographic odyssey, which has taken more than a decade of intensive work to complete. In addition to a range of starkly powerful animal portraits, Brandt introduces some new themes, as humans make an appearance for the first time. The book offers a darker vision of this world, still filled with a stunning beauty but now tragically tainted and fast disappearing at the hands of man. Īcross the Ravaged Land is the third and final volume in Brandt’s trilogy of books documenting the disappearing animals of eastern Africa. You can read more about his preference for film and his inspiration for this book in a personal essay entitled, I am the Walrus. Discover Lake Natron, a lake that Turns Animals to StonesDISCLAIMER : For Copyright Matters please Contact us directly. Brandt only uses two fixed lenses, a 35mm (standard 50mm equivalent) and a 100mm. adjacent to the eastern shoreline revealed 28 Stone Age archaeological. But as Brandt himself has noted, the images are more art than science. Abstract Unlike Peninj and Monik localities in western Lake Natron, eastern Lake. ![]() ![]() Each roll of film comes with only 10 shots and there is no zoom, auto-focus, auto-metering, motor drive or image stabilizing lenses. The gloomy images make the lake look like a living museum where animals fall into the water and immediately turn to stone. The more than 400 footprints cover an area slightly larger than a tennis court, crisscrossing the dark gray mudflat of Engare Sero, on the southern shore of Tanzania’s Lake Natron. The arresting images below were taken with a medium format Pentax 67II. I took these creatures as I found them on the shoreline, and then placed them in ‘living’ positions, bringing them back to ‘life’, as it were. The soda and salt causes the creatures to calcify, perfectly preserved, as they dry. The water has an extremely high soda and salt content, so high that it would strip the ink off my Kodak film boxes within a few seconds. No-one knows for certain exactly how they die, but it appears that the extreme reflective nature of the lake’s surface confuses them, and like birds crashing into plate glass windows, they crash into the lake. “I unexpectedly found the creatures – all manner of birds and bats – washed up along the shoreline of Lake Natron in Northern Tanzania. ![]()
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