lichen, The Last of Us + (some) musings
Babes and bots,
Howdy! Anyone seen The Last of Us recently? I recommend stealing someone's HBO account info to watch it ASAP because let me tell you, this shit is wild. But let me come back to that...
lichen
And while I'm certainly no lichen expert (and probably got a few of these wrong), lichen is also just naturally hard to identify. There are slight differences in the cellular makeup of the fungus and algae--the combination that sticks depends entirely on the environment. However, lichen can grow anywhere between sea and alpine levels. In Antarctica, lichen's three queens are fruticose, crustose, and foliose (which just so happen to be the three most common lichen in Colorado, too).
Lichens have been nicknamed "nature's pioneer" because they can colonize bare rock and are usually first to establish on newly exposed surfaces.
I wonder what this means, "first to establish" or "newly exposed" in the history of colonization. OED tells us that colonist includes people, inhabitants, and plants, the latter two of which seem both separate and same depending on context. H.C. Watson, for example, defined colonists as,
A weed of cultivated land or about houses, and seldom found except in places where the ground has been adapted for its production by the operations of man...
In discussing insects South of the equator, Darwin noted,
The often-repeated description of the first colonists of the coral islets in the South Sea, is not, probably, quite correct: I fear it destroys the poetry of the story to find, that these little vile insects should thus take possession before the cocoa-nut tree and other noble plants have appeared.
And in 1876, a man named A.R. Wallace stated that,
We may be sure that birds like the finches, which are profoundly modified and adapted to the special conditions of the climate and vegetation, are among the most ancient of the colonists.
What I can't seem to find, though, is an oft-used definition of plants and animals as colonists before 1800. Robert Cawdrey's A Table Alphabeticall (1609) was a dead end, though I am still searching. I wonder if the term "colonizer plant" has any relationship to human colonists who, in their travels across the globe, brought with them non-native plants, animals, and diseases. I also wonder how a mysterious brain fungus adapted to survive inside humans might be defined, and if that definition is, perhaps, a metaphor for zombie lore. Perhaps the bigger question I'm asking is how language informs knowledge, lived experience, and history.
Thanks for taking a bite out of the sandwich with me!
xoxo
BLT
Can't wait to discuss this more!!
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