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Chantelle Flores & Harrison Goldspiel
Welcome to Spire鈥檚 tenth anniversary issue! Since our inaugural issue in 2017, we have been fortunate to publish a wide variety of environmental stories, including over 150 works of fine art, photography, poetry, essays, research articles, and even animation. We are grateful to the many talented contributors who have shared their pieces with us and the larger community in 海角社区, advancing awareness, dialogue, and action around conservation and sustainability.
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海角社区 Lobstering Industry: Climate Change Poses a Threat
Emma Hallee
When people think of 海角社区, they think of its cold winters, thick forests, unique coasts, and its lobster. Throughout 海角社区鈥檚 history and landscape, the lobster has been an identifiable feature of the state鈥檚 culture. Whether on a pair of socks, a sweatshirt, or an ornament, the lobster is a long-standing symbol of 海角社区. Why is this? Because in the mid-1800s, 海角社区 became the largest shipbuilding and fishing outpost. Lobsters鈥 prevalence in 海角社区鈥檚 growing fishing industry led to it becoming a culturally significant image of the state.
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Erin Grabe
Night on the island is heavy, total
Scattered beacons of light draw us forward
A classroom鈥檚 golden light brightens the shore
We gather to escape the ocean鈥檚 chill
Professor frees echoes from the seafloor
Sounds of the sea, retrieved just hours before
Rapt attention, one light illuminates
Fills the room with sharp dramatic shadows
Wooden interior casts a dull glow.
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Andrea Lani
The water is dark coppery brown where it鈥檚 shaded by trees, silvery blue where it mirrors the sky, and golden green where it reflects the sunlit crowns of pines. It appears almost perfectly still, though now and then minute ripples radiate outward where a needle has dropped onto its surface, and there鈥檚 a faint shimmer in the light-struck stretches. But there鈥檚 no perceptible current, nothing to indicate which direction the water is flowing, or whether it鈥檚 flowing at all.
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Using Narrative to Explain Uncertainty in Climate Change
Grace Freeman, Alina Rousseau, Michelle Brunton, Luke Kramer, Stephanie Miller, and Laura Kate Corlew
This study presents the findings on the use of narrative (i.e., storytelling) when communicating complex scientific uncertainties. A growing body of evidence in narrative cognition and communication has shown promise for the use of narrative in science communication. Prior research has shown uncertainty is difficult to communicate and raises ethical concerns since scientists do not want audiences to be either underconfident in projections with epistemic uncertainty (i.e., where unknowns remain) or overconfident in projections with aleatory uncertainty (i.e., based on random factors). This project researched the use of narrative in communicating the scientific uncertainty of data projection tools built to support agricultural and conservation decision makers with decisions related to climate change.
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Ode on a Plastic Starbucks Cup
Benjamin Thorne
Walking along a creek bank I find
half-buried beneath leaf-litter
a Starbucks cup, stained and trampled.
The sea-queen stares back haughtily,
her faded raiment, once emerald green,
resembles now a paler sage; yet still
her pursed smile remains intact.
How wise this refuse Mona Lisa,
to refuse decay as coyly
as a princess does a suitor!
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Cassian Smith
In the far flung reaches of that brambled, berried, barrenbush, greenleaves gone with the first hints of a long overwinter. You, glossy, dipped in honey and soaking on the sunning porch and dulling with the sudden dip of winter solstice. You, nipping indistinctly at the flat red that clashes with the inkwell cracked yellow of each feather, even as dulled by the ever night sky. Morning glory in melody, a rise of the new day.
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Mara Scallon
鈥淪o! I鈥檓 signed up to do a bird count survey for the Mountain Birdwatch Project鈥ould u be interested in joining??鈥
This early-evening text from my dear friend KP brought a smile to my face. I quickly replied that I鈥檇 check my schedule, and within two days we鈥檇 finalized our plans. I was a bit apprehensive about this trip, not because of backpacking with KP but because of my fledgling birding skills. I have had hearing loss from an early age, which has served as an easy excuse for why I tend to identify birds visually instead of auditorily. As someone who expends a lot of effort on following and understanding human speech, I usually view time spent near nonhumans as an opportunity to relax, let down my guard, and not worry about focusing too much on what the other critters are saying.
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Dream Big, Speak Up: Reimagining Waste Infrastructures in 海角社区
Erin Victor
I am a waste nerd. If you open the Photos app on my phone, you will find hundreds of pictures of waste-related infrastructures (Figure 1). Nestled between pictures of my children, I have photos of trash, recycling, and compost bins from around the world. After scrolling through a photo shoot of our new puppy, you will find photographs of recycling trucks and close-ups of recycling labels on packaging. I even have photos from touring recycling facilities, one of my favorite pastimes.
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Patricia Arrington
Hundreds
of blushing faces,
sunny greeters
of the forest edge
between sandy
road sides
and the dark
of trees.
Never one,
but multitudes.
A conversation
of bumblebees
and wasps.
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Eleanore Allan-Rahill
Ice remembers.
Its structure holds the story.
Crystalline arrangements reveal the past.
Pushed from the side by mountains
pushed down upon by overlying snow
pushed again from the side
pressure building
stressors in many directions.
When pushed one way,
durability against that pressure grows,
a visible transformation.
But toughness in one direction requires softness in others,
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An Anatomy of Steller鈥檚 Sea Cow
Matthew Jablonski
In the conference room, the scientists discuss their plans to deextinct Steller鈥檚 sea cow.
The younger scientist says, Steller said that they tasted like beef, and that the juveniles tasted like veal.
The older scientist asks, How can we know what it tastes like? What if veal back then tasted very differently from the veal we have today?
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Jordan Thompson
I walked along my path and saw a tree on the ground.
Solitary, it stood. It was once tall, Triumphant.
Now, on the ground it lay. Crestfallen, defeated.
Can a tree feel when it is about to fall?
If it could, would that make its descent more tragic鈥
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Nestor Walters
海角社区鈥檚 virtual Ice Age tour begins on a well-known coast-side mountain peak marked by smoothed boulders and rivulet-like ridges [1]. The landscape was formed, according to our guide, the late Dr. Harold W. Borns of the University of 海角社区, by an ice sheet that, twenty-five thousand years ago, was two miles thick over this particular mountain. 鈥淯nder my feet,鈥 Dr. Borns tells us, 鈥渨as the first piece of 海角社区 to see the light of day after the Laurentide ice sheet retreated.鈥
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