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The walrus lacks a rudimentary understanding of the relationship between seasonal temperatures and the amount of sea ice generated annually in the northern hemisphere, and cannot formulate even a basic hypothesis that might draw a link between the lack of sea ice and a massive surge in coastal overcrowding among those of his own kind. Nor could we expect the walrus to comprehend that this overcrowding has become so severe that many walruses are continually driven to seek out higher and higher ground, and may suddenly find themselves precariously perched atop the tall, frozen, rocky cliffs of the Russian arctic coast, hundreds of meters above the sea, as their pinniped flippers lose traction, and the rocks and gravel beneath them give way under their considerable bulk. It would be a bridge too far for us to expect that the walrus might understand the anatomy of even his own eye such that he would know that the curvature of its lens is well-suited for underwater vision, but is, in fact, maladapted for making spatial judgements while on land. And yet, we are aware of all of these things, of this horrifying confluence of circumstances for which we’re at least partly to blame, and from which the walrus now finds himself unable to escape. And we watch it all unfold silently, so passively: those hulking ruins as they tumble down the cliff faces, one by one, wild-eyed, terrified, bewildered and breaking in their final moments.
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Apr 18, 2019
Apr 18, 2019 at 3:14 AM UTC
The Walrus
The walrus lacks a rudimentary understanding of the relationship between seasonal temperatures and the amount of sea ice generated annually in the northern hemisphere, and cannot formulate even a basic hypothesis that might draw a link between the lack of sea ice and a massive surge in coastal overcrowding among those of his own kind. Nor could we expect the walrus to comprehend that this overcrowding has become so severe that many walruses are continually driven to seek out higher and higher ground, and may suddenly find themselves precariously perched atop the tall, frozen, rocky cliffs of the Russian arctic coast, hundreds of meters above the sea, as their pinniped flippers lose traction, and the rocks and gravel beneath them give way under their considerable bulk. It would be a bridge too far for us to expect that the walrus might understand the anatomy of even his own eye such that he would know that the curvature of its lens is well-suited for underwater vision, but is, in fact, maladapted for making spatial judgements while on land. And yet, we are aware of all of these things, of this horrifying confluence of circumstances for which we’re at least partly to blame, and from which the walrus now finds himself unable to escape. And we watch it all unfold silently, so passively: those hulking ruins as they tumble down the cliff faces, one by one, wild-eyed, terrified, bewildered and breaking in their final moments.
Ira-Desmond
Written by
42/M/American
Apr 18, 2019
Apr 18, 2019 at 3:14 AM UTC
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