World Wide Panorama mailing list archive

Mailinglist:wwp@yahoogroups.com
Sender:olivier satnet
Date/Time:2006-Mar-12 03:31:00
Subject:Borders ....

Thread:


wwp@yahoogroups.com: Borders .... olivier satnet 2006-Mar-12 03:31:00
I live in ecuador ..... 

were a line physicaly painted on the floor with a place and a monument 
markt the North hemisphere and the south hemisphere .... 

the "border" of middle of the world ... 


Olivier -Quito , ecuador . latitud 00
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: G. Donald Bain 
  To: #removed# 
  Sent: Saturday, March 11, 2006 5:09 PM
  Subject: thoughts on "borders" - political boundaries


  We try to select WWP themes that allow a variety of interpretations  
  and a wide range of creative expression. You can take the theme  
  literally, or metaphorically. There is always some interesting  
  discussion on this list in the weeks leading up to the event.

  I tend to take the themes rather literally - for "Water" I shot a  
  waterfall and reservoir, for "Marketplace" the Ferry Building  
  Marketplace. For me, as a geographer, one of the great things about  
  the WWP is seeing all the different places, the varied environments  
  and cultures all with a common theme.

  So, consider shooting actual borders - invisible lines on the ground,  
  usually defined by governments, but then made visible by the human  
  activities that must conform to them.

  Here are a few examples of interesting borders:

  In the desert of Southern California the line between Riverside and  
  Imperial counties (usually county boundaries are of little account)  
  is marked by a dramatic contrast between lush irrigated agriculture  
  (grapes and oranges) on one side, and sere barren desert on the  
  other. It is because an irrigation project boundary coincides with  
  the county line.

  City and similar boundaries often show striking differences in  
  development - protected greenbelt right up against subdivisions.  
  Differing histories and municipal priorities sometimes highlight the  
  boundary between two cities (my high school intern Kaz is working on  
  one of these). Redevelopment district boundaries often contrast old  
  with new neighborhoods, sewer and water district boundaries limit  
  sprawl.

  The state of Nevada has for many years allowed activities that are  
  illegal elsewhere, most notably gambling and prostitution. This has  
  resulted in some striking border scenes. On several highways you  
  drive for hours through uninhabited country, then find a cluster of  
  gaudy casinos and hotels at the state line. On one lonely desert road  
  the border is marked by a little cluster of shabby trailers with a  
  huge sign announcing "brothel".

  I had a friend from Wisconsin (America's Dairyland) who said that  
  sale of margarine was prohibited there, and as a result there were  
  roadside "oleo" stands on major roads at the state line. I doubt if  
  this is still true, but there are probably other similar cases.  
  Driving across Texas, for example, one passes through "dry" counties,  
  where sale of alcoholic beverages is strictly limited.

  California even has border checkpoints with adjacent states - for  
  agricultural inspection. I found the same thing between the two  
  Mexican states of Baja California Norte and Sur, where armed guards  
  check your papers then ask blandly if you have any "guns, drugs, or  
  citrus fruit".

  Some borders are notable for their very insignificance - the US- 
  Canada border for example. Until recently it was unfenced and  
  unguarded, often marked only by a line clearcut through the forest.  
  In one location it even runs down the middle of the village street.  
  But now, with drug-smuggling from Canada becoming a problem, along  
  with Homeland Security concerns, the border checkpoints are being  
  vastly expanded.

  The US-Mexico border is a fascinating subject . Although patrolled  
  and in places fenced, it is remarkably porous, with at least 350,000  
  "undocumented aliens" crossing it each year. My wife and I camped  
  right next to the border once, and all night we heard people running  
  past our tent, northbound in the dark. The border itself varies from  
  high fence with moat and surveillance cameras in urban areas, to a  
  simple barbed-wire cattle fence out in the desert. In Texas it runs  
  down the middle of the river (Rio Grande in the US, Rio Bravo in  
  Mexico).

  In several places twin cities have grown up on the international  
  border: Detroit and Windsor, Niagara Falls-Niagara Falls on the  
  northern border; San Diego-Tijuana, El Paso-Juarez, Laredo-Nuevo  
  Laredo on the southern border. The daily border crossings in these  
  cities are on a truly massive scale.

  I once flew across the border between the Dominican Republic and  
  Haiti. The Dominican side was undisturbed forest - an uninhabited  
  military buffer zone. The Haitian side was raw red eroding hillsides  
  with virtually no trees, dotted with straw-thatched villages.

  Some borders that used to be important are now much less significant  
  - for example between the former West and East Germany, and through  
  Berlin. But others have gained in importance - new countries formed  
  by the breakup of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia, internal  
  boundaries become international borders.

  Borders often show signs of former conflicts - fortifications from  
  the Maginot Line to Hadrian's Wall, as well as monuments to peace  
  treaties. And of course some borders are still scenes of conflict -  
  the repeatedly redefined borders of Israel.

  Culture often changes at a border - signs and place names can be in  
  different languages, postal boxes and uniforms change, there are  
  usually flags.

  I'm running out of time here, but I hope this may have sparked a few  
  ideas. Everyone, please share your creative ideas with the list.

  Don


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