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G@ttoGiallo
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G@tto: On SALE in South Sardinia

October 31, 2009

Back on La Pigna hill in Sanremo...

I've already reported a first visit up to the Sanremo ancient area in
a previous post
. I was recently back there and up the hill to enjoy
its particular atmosphere and take a closer look to the huge fig trees
that thrust their roots into the crevices of that rocky ground.


The Ficus macrophilla, commonly known as the Moreton Bay fig is a
large
evergreen banyan tree of the Moraceae family, subsection of the
Malvantherae.



Its specific epithet macrophylla is derived from the ancient Greek makro
(large) and phyllon (leaf) and refers to the size of the leaves.






The characteristic "melting" appearance of the Ficus macrophylla is due
to its habit of dropping aerial roots from its branches which on reaching
the ground thicken into supplementary trunks which help to support the
great weight of its crown.



The trunk can be massive, with thick, prominent structure and a rough
grey-brown bark.
Some trees can reach heights of 60 m.


Currently the tallest Moreton Bay Fig (49 m) is found near Egg Rock, in
Queensland, Australia, but even Europe exhibits some sizeable
naturalized specimen.
___
(More on > Wikipedia).

October 28, 2009

Female Nephila komaci, the hugest webweaving spider.

The Nephila komaci can be found in Madagascar and South Africa.
They can be up to three feet (one meter) wide and are a member
of
the orbweaving spiders' group.

"In the PLoS ONE paper, Kuntner and Coddington described Nephila komaci
as a new species, now the largest web-spinning species known, and placed
it on the evolutionary tree of
Nephila". (EurekAlert)


(Photos M. Kuntner)
1) a giant golden orb-web exceeding 1 meter in diameter:
Nephila inaurata,
Rodrigues, Indian Ocean.

2) extreme sexual size dimorphism in Nephila spiders: Small male and large
female,
Nephila pilipes, Singapore.
____

Jumping now to another site, EarthTouch, for a beautiful video, taken early
in the morning, when the sun rays make the web's threads shine like gold,
which explains the spider's name.

Golden orb-web spider - Moremi Game Reserve, Okavango Delta, Botswana.
____
* Previous post on Golden orb spider.

October 27, 2009

Rampini the ChIndian

A brilliant journalist and writer I discovered reading "The ChIndia Empire".

Listen to March 2007 CDT interview here (en).



EuroTopics > Federico Rampini, 10 articles cited in the European Press
Review.


At Harry Kreisler's "Conversations with history".


(UCtelevision)


Born in Genoa in 1956, Federico Rampini has been a student of the liberal French
sociologist Raymond Aron at Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, in Paris
and of the economist Mario Monti at the Bocconi University in Milan.

As a journalist, he first worked for "Città Futura" in 1977, the weekly magazine of the
FGEI, when the general secretary was Massimo D'Alema and for weekly "Rinascita"
in 1979, the PCI weekly of Enrico Berlinguer.

Federico Rampini is a columnist, correspondent and editor for European affairs of La
Repubblica,
since 1997.
He is a consultant at Institut Français des Relations internationales, member of the
Scientific board of the journal Critique Internationale, published in Paris by the Fondation
Nationale des Sciences Politiques and member the Italian magazine of geopolitics Limes.

He also contributed as a columnist to Le Figaro, L'Express, Politique étrangère, in France.
(more).
____
Bibliography...

October 24, 2009

Which future for our planet ?


(click)

Tens of thousands of climate change activists have been out in force
all over the world to raise awareness of the dangers of global warming.



As many as 4,000 protests have been taking place in 170
countries
around the globe to mark World Climate Day.

The coordinated campaign was designed to highlight ecological
concerns in the run-up to the international climate conference
to be held in Copenhagen next month.


(Ultimatum-climatique)



____

October 23, 2009

The usual Oberkampf wall...


October 22nd - # 58 by NP77


October 8th - # 57 by Poch

GRAFFITI TODAY
The Fondation Cartier has asked ten artists from different countries to create works and ephemeral
installations specifically for the exhibition.
Chosen for the singularity of their approach and the force of their artistic vision, Basco Vazko, Cripta,
JonOne, Olivier Kosta, Théfaine, Barry McGee, Nug, Evan Roth, Boris Tellegen-Delta, Vitché and
Gérard Zlotykamien present their work within the Fondation Cartier’s gallery spaces as well as on its
glass façade.

In collaboration with the Association le M.U.R., the Fondation Cartier has also invited artists to create
large-scale posters, in the presence of the public, every first weekend of the month.
These posters are exhibited at the Fondation Cartier for one month before being moved to the billboard
of the association, located at the intersection of the Saint-Maur and Oberkampf streets in Paris.
The artists participating in the project include Alexöne, the Collectif 1980, Fancie, Jean Faucheur and
WK Interact, Honet, NP 77, Poch, RCF 1, Sun7 and Tom Tom.
In addition, L’Atlas, DTagno and Yseult have been invited to create unique and temporary works for the
garden of the Fondation Cartier.
From São Paulo to Amsterdam, San Francisco to Paris, graffiti today continues to evolve, adopting new
forms and modes of expression.
______________________
Born in the Streets - GRAFFITI
from July/7 to Nov/29, 2009

Fondation Cartier pour l’art Contemporain
261, boulevard Raspail
75014 Paris - France

http://Fondation Cartier



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