Skip to content

Christopher J. Preston

Writing on wildlife, technology, and nature

  • Latest Blog Posts
  • Tenacious Beasts
  • The Synthetic Age
  • Events
  • Writing Services
  • Listen up….
  • Contact

Tag: cloud brightening

Posted on November 6, 2017August 10, 2018

Wrapping Glaciers, Making Clouds, and Reflecting Sunlight

An image in the online Encyclopaedia Britannica illustrating the various strategies for climate engineering has always bothered me. Alongside the highly technical and speculative proposal of placing orbiting mirrors in space to intercept the sun’s rays sits the highly unsophisticated and low-tech proposal of wrapping melting glaciers with huge sheets of white fabric. The juxtaposition …

Continue reading "Wrapping Glaciers, Making Clouds, and Reflecting Sunlight"

Topics

  • aesthetics
  • Alaska
  • Albert Borgmann
  • anthropocene
  • architecture
  • Arctic
  • artisan
  • batteries
  • bears
  • biodiversity
  • biotechnology
  • bison
  • Blackfeet
  • carbon capture
  • climate
  • Climate Change
  • Climate Engineering
  • cloning
  • cloud brightening
  • CRISPR
  • de-extinction
  • deextinction
  • earth systems
  • ecology
  • electric vehicles
  • ethics
  • extinction
  • fire
  • flood
  • food
  • forests
  • gardening
  • Gene Drives
  • heat
  • hurricane
  • Italy
  • justice
  • lynx
  • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Montana
  • Nanotechnology
  • nature
  • new urbanism
  • oceans
  • passenger pigeon
  • peregrine falcon
  • philosophy
  • plastic
  • Plastocene
  • pollution
  • Pope Francis
  • primates
  • restoration
  • Rewilding
  • Rocky Mountains
  • salmon
  • ships
  • snow
  • solar panels
  • solar radiation management
  • Sussex
  • Synthetic Age
  • Synthetic Biology
  • tallgrass prairie
  • technology
  • Tenacious Beasts
  • Tesla
  • Tim Cook
  • tragedy of the commons
  • transportation
  • wildlife
  • wind turbines
  • winter
  • wolves
  • Yellowstone

the author

Christopher J. Preston is a writer, a professor of philosophy, and a one-time commercial fisherman who is obsessed with the sight of freshly falling snow. The most inflated title he ever possessed was Distinguished Visiting Fellow in the Ethics of the Anthropocene.

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Create a website or blog at WordPress.com
  • Follow Following
    • Christopher J. Preston
    • Join 112 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Christopher J. Preston
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...