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Emily Graslie
Emily Graslie
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Prints Hanna, Wyoming No. 1
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Hanna, Wyoming No. 1

from $18.00

In Episode 3 of Prehistoric Road Trip we traveled to a cattle ranch / wind farm outside the town of Hanna, Wyoming, to meet up with a team of paleontologists researching the 56 million-year-old fossil plants found in the rock layers of the surrounding landscape. They were studying an ancient climate change event caused by a massive influx of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere that wasn’t unlike the global warming we’re experiencing today — except, what’s happening now is on the scale of a few centuries, not a few million years. You can watch that segment of the television series here: Leaf it to the experts; Studying plants to understand an ancient global warming event

After eight months of planning the shoot from a windowless basement office in Chicago, this was the first field site we filmed at in June 2019 — and it was this view that greeted me as soon as I stepped out of the car at our campsite, with the setting sun radiating through clearing storm clouds. There’s something richly poetic and profound about filming a climate change segment on ranchland that’s now dually used for farming wind, too.

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In Episode 3 of Prehistoric Road Trip we traveled to a cattle ranch / wind farm outside the town of Hanna, Wyoming, to meet up with a team of paleontologists researching the 56 million-year-old fossil plants found in the rock layers of the surrounding landscape. They were studying an ancient climate change event caused by a massive influx of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere that wasn’t unlike the global warming we’re experiencing today — except, what’s happening now is on the scale of a few centuries, not a few million years. You can watch that segment of the television series here: Leaf it to the experts; Studying plants to understand an ancient global warming event

After eight months of planning the shoot from a windowless basement office in Chicago, this was the first field site we filmed at in June 2019 — and it was this view that greeted me as soon as I stepped out of the car at our campsite, with the setting sun radiating through clearing storm clouds. There’s something richly poetic and profound about filming a climate change segment on ranchland that’s now dually used for farming wind, too.

In Episode 3 of Prehistoric Road Trip we traveled to a cattle ranch / wind farm outside the town of Hanna, Wyoming, to meet up with a team of paleontologists researching the 56 million-year-old fossil plants found in the rock layers of the surrounding landscape. They were studying an ancient climate change event caused by a massive influx of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere that wasn’t unlike the global warming we’re experiencing today — except, what’s happening now is on the scale of a few centuries, not a few million years. You can watch that segment of the television series here: Leaf it to the experts; Studying plants to understand an ancient global warming event

After eight months of planning the shoot from a windowless basement office in Chicago, this was the first field site we filmed at in June 2019 — and it was this view that greeted me as soon as I stepped out of the car at our campsite, with the setting sun radiating through clearing storm clouds. There’s something richly poetic and profound about filming a climate change segment on ranchland that’s now dually used for farming wind, too.

PRINTING INFO

This gallery-quality print can be created on archival paper or unstretched, unmounted canvas. Each print is made to order.

Note: Images are not cropped, so some prints may have white borders at certain sizes if the aspect ratio differs from the original painting.

Prints are signed on the front, signed and dated on the back.

SHIPPING

Shipping is available worldwide and each order will be sent within 5-7 business days. All small prints are carefully packed flat. Larger prints, over 16” on one side, will be sent in a mailing tube.

 
 

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