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In the late 19th century, California was best known for gold. In the 20th century, California was known for devices created from silicon. Progress comes and goes; today's boom town becomes tomorrow's ghost town. Yesterday's reminders of past technology put today's frenetic pace to get new technology to market at an ever faster rate into perspective. It seems the only constant is nature's resilience.
Hiking in Northern California I came across a few old mines. The abandoned technology I witnessed being reclaimed by nature reminded me of Dagny and Rearden's trip to Wisconsin to find a motor to save her train line.
From Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand, pp.264-265 (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0525934189/sr=8-3/qid=1150593905/ref=pd_bbs_3/103-8348592-9977448?%5Fencoding=UTF8): "The corpse they saw in the weeds by the roadside was a rusty cylinder with bits of glass--the remnant of a gas-station pump.
It was the only thing left visible. The few charred posts, the slab of concrete and the sparkle of glass dust--which had been a gas station--were swallowed in the brush, not to be noticed except by a careful glance, not to be seen at all in another year. They looked away. They drove on, not wanting to know what else lay hidden under the miles of weeds. They felt the same wonder like a weight in the silence between them: wonder as to how much the weeds had swallowed and how fast.
The road ended abruptly behind the turn of a hill. What remained was a few chunks of concrete sticking out of a long, pitted stretch of tar and mud. The concrete had been smashed by someone and carted away; even weeds could not grow in the strip of earth left behind. On the crest of a distant hill, a single telegraph pole stood slanted against the sky, like a cross over a vast grave."
I took the photographs 6/12/2006 while hiking in the Empire Mine State Park in the town of Grass Valley, CA.
posted by
Eden | 6/17/2006 05:30:00 PM
 
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