And what adult can forget Monday, July 20, 1969, at 10:56 a.m. Eastern Standard Time, the moment when Neil Armstrong placed
the first human footprint on the moon - «one giant leap for mankind!»
Not exact matches
No favorite yet because this is the
first pregnancy my husband has agreed to try cloth diapers — thank you
Human Footprint on Natn't Geo (if I recall correctly)!
Review of «
Footprint free
human iPSCs from articular cartilage with redifferentiation capacity - a
first step towards a clinical grade cell source» from Stem Cell Translational Medicine by Stuart P. Atkinson
I wanted to achieve a kind of closer contact by using a more primal element of the body and I suppose the
footprint is the
first print
humans ever made.
It predicted that during the
first half of the 21st century the ongoing growth in the
human ecological
footprint would stop - either through catastrophic «overshoot and collapse» - or through well - managed «peak and decline.»
I
first heard about this document via Rob Hopkins over at TransitionCulture, who wrote about a debate on Transition Towns that featured himself and Alastair Brown of ManTownHuman, in which Brown aparently suggested that «real resilience comes from expanding the
human footprint.»
The snail, a symbol of nature created from recycled, artificial material, with a minimal carbon
footprint, were chosen to convey three metaphors: the
first relates to the critter carrying its home on its back, the second connects to hearing, since the spiral looks similar to the
human ear, and the last refers to technology, with the symbol» @» (called a «snail» in Italian) ubiquitous in email communication.