Saturday, November 13, 2010

Elephants and Rivers

During the dry season, when water is low, an elephant will dig holes to find water, drawing up to two gallons at a time with its trunk. Though these open wells are created by elephants, other wildlife also depend on them for survival. After elephants leave an area, smaller animals rush to the watering holes dug by the elephants. Elephants are essential for creating worn paths through the thick forests, excavating trees in the open savannahs, and unearthing water wherever it is needed.
Photographer Alex Bernasconi hopes these images invite us to reflect on our relationship to the natural world. Bernasconi is motivated by a sense of urgency to counteract the destruction of nature: "It is the stark contrast between the environment in which we are accustomed to live and the one we are putting in jeopardy that has impelled me to photograph and record the natural world. It is the wilder places that preserve intact the primeval emotions that lie dormant in all of us. These are the essence of life."

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