Underland

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by Robert Macfarlane


  Verne, Jules, Journey to the Centre of the Earth, trans. Robert Baldick (1864; Harmondsworth: Puffin Books, 1965)

  Wark, Mackenzie, Molecular Red: Theory for the Anthropocene (London: Verso, 2015) Webb, Dave (dir.), Fight for Life: The Neil Moss Story (2006)

  Webb, Dave, and Whiteside, Judy, ‘Fight for Life: The Neil Moss Story’

  Weir, Andy, ‘Deep Decay: Into Diachronic Polychromatic Material Fictions’, PARSE 4 (2017)

  *Weizman, Eyal, Hollow Land: Israel’s Architecture of Occupation (London: Verso, 2007)

  Wells, H. G., The Time Machine (1895; Richmond: Alma Classics, 2017)

  Williams, Rosalind, Notes on the Underground: An Essay on Technology, Society, and the Imagination (London: MIT Press, 2008)

  Williams, William Carlos, The Collected Poems of William Carlos Williams, Volume 111939–1962, ed. Christopher MacGowan (New York: New Directions, 1988)

  Wilson, Louise K. (ed.), A Record of Fear (Salisbury: B.A.S. Printers Ltd, 2005)

  Wohlleben, Peter, The Hidden Life of Trees, trans. Jane Billinghurst (Vancouver/Berkeley: Greystone Press, 2016)

  Wulf, Andrea, The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt’s New World (New York: Knopf, 2015)

  Wylie, John, ‘The Spectral Geographies of W. G. Sebald’, Cultural Geographies 14 (2007)

  Wyndham, John, The Chrysalids (1955; London: Penguin, 2018)

  *Yusoff, Kathryn, ‘Geologic Subjects: Nonhuman Origins, Geomorphic Aesthetics, and the Art of Becoming Inhuman’, cultural geographies 22:3 (2015)

  Zalasiewicz, Jan, et al., ‘The Anthropocene: A New Epoch of Geological Time?’, Philosophical Transactions. Series A, Mathematical, Physical, and Engineering Sciences 369 (2011)

  Zhdanova, N. N., et al., ‘Ionizing Radiation Attracts Soil Fungi’, Mycological Research 108:9 (2004)

  Zola, Emile, Germinal, trans. Havelock Ellis (London: Dent, 1970)

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  I thank first those who have shaped this book most as companions, guides and teachers, helping me learn to see in the dark: John Beatty, Hein Bjerck, Sean and Jane Borodale, Bill Carslake, Lucian and Maria Carmen Comoy, Sergio Dambrosi, Steve Dilworth, Bradley Garrett, Meriel Harrison, Lina and Jay, Helen Mort, Robert Mulvaney, Bjørnar Nicolaisen, Þóra Pétursdóttir, Neil Rowley, Merlin Sheldrake, Richard Skelton, Helen and Matt Spenceley, Christopher Toth and Pasi Tuohimaa.

  Garnette Cadogan, Walter Donohue, Henry Hitchings, Julith Jedamus, Simon McBurney, Garry Martin, Rob Newton and Jedediah Purdy read all or part of Underland in the course of its writing; their responses were invaluable. I hope I have made my profound gratitude apparent to each of you. Several people brought their specialist knowledge to bear on specific sections of the book, correcting and clarifying my work with generous expertise. I am especially grateful to Carolin Crawford (on stars), John MacLennan (on rocks) and Ruth Mottram (on ice). Tanja Trček kindly and bravely translated the foiba text for me. Rob Newton was the best research assistant I could have hoped for in the closing months of the book, offering calm counsel and sharp eyes at every turn.

  My editor Simon Prosser and my agent Jessica Woollard have been remarkable readers and friends throughout the six and a half years it took me to write Underland. At Hamish Hamilton/Penguin I have been exceptionally fortunate to work with Richard Bravery, Dave Cradduck, Caroline Pretty, Anna Ridley, Ellie Smith and Hermione Thompson. At W. W. Norton in America I have benefited immensely from the acuity, support and patience of my editor Matt Weiland and the encouragement of Jim Rutman.

  I have learned so much from – and thought much with – my students, especially Jei Degenhardt, Louis Klee, Aron Penczu, Kryštof Vosatka and Lewis Wynn. I thank my close friends for all they have done for me and the book: Julie Brook, Peter Davidson, Gareth Evans, Nick Hayes, Michael Hrebeniak, Michael Hurley, Raphael Lyne, Finlay Macleod, Leo Mellor, Jackie Morris, Clair Quentin, Corinna Russell, Jan and Chris Schramm, David Trotter, James Wade and Simon Williams. Above all and forever, love and gratitude to Julia, Lily, Tom and Will, and to my parents, Rosamund and John.

  Thanks are then also due for many kinds of assistance, information and inspiration over the years: to Glenn Albrecht, Alice and Chris Allan, Tim Allen, Antti Apunen, Marina Ballard, Ariane Bankes, Mattias Bärmann, Ginny Battson, Sharon Blackie, Miguel Angel Blanco, Adam Bobbette, Edward-John Bottomley, James Bradley, Michael Bravo, Julia Brigdale, Julie Brook, Rob Bushby, Jonathan and Keggie Carew, Steve Casimiro, Silvia Ceramicola, Christopher Chippendale, Václav Cílek, Horatio Clare, Erlend Clouston, Michela Coletta, Ray Collins, Adrian Cooper, Holly Corfield-Carr, Nicola Dahrendorf, John Dale, William Dalrymple, Jane Davidson, Jeremy Davies, Tim Dee, Thomas Demarchi, Aly Derby, Hildegard Diemberger, Hunter Dukes, Cody Duncan, Minna Moore Ede, Chris Evans, Garry Fabian-Miller, David Farrier, Kitty Fedorec, Rose Ferraby, Toby Ferris, Johnny Flynn, Xesus Fraga, Robin Friend, Rebecca Giggs, Antony Gormley, Simon Grant, Susan Greaney, Pino Guidi, Beatrice Harding, Kateřrina Havlíková, M. John Harrison, Harriet Hawkins, Caspar Henderson, Julia Hoffman, Cymene Howe, Robert Hyde, Bob Jellicoe, Martin Johnson, Stuart Kelly, Michael Kerr, Patrick Kingsley, Andrew Kötting, Paul Laity, Szabolcs Leél-Őssy, Angela Leighton, Emily Lethbridge, Huw Lewis-Jones, Tim de Lisle, Thelma and Bill Lovell, Borut Lozej, Richard Mabey, Helen Macdonald, Jim Macfarlane, Duncan Mackay, Finlay Macleod, Andrew McNeillie, Geoff Manaugh, Kevan Manwaring, Philip Marsden, Jana Martinčič, Rod Mengham, China Miéville, Alex Moss, Helen Murphy, Victoria Nelson, Kate Norbury, Annie O’Garra Worsley, Bjørnar Olsen, Jay Owens, Francesco Panetta, Fabio Pasini, Donald and Lucy Peck, Sibylle Pein, Borut Peric, Pirhuk, Jonathan Power, Andrew Ray, Lara Reid, Fiona Reynolds, Dan Richards, Autumn Richardson, Darmon Richter, Tim Robinson, David Rose, Giuliana Rossi, Corinna Russell, Stanley Schtinter, Adam Scovell, Geoff Shipp, Robbie Shone, Philip Sidney, Iain Sinclair, Ingrid Skjoldvœr, Paul Slovak, Jos Smith, Rebecca Solnit, Emily Stokes, John and Katja Stubbs, Kier Swaffield, Sarah Thomas, Louis Torelli, Michaela Vieser, Marina Warner, Jim Warren, Julianne Warren, Giles Watson, Stephen Watts, Samantha Weinberg, Andy Weir, Deb Wilenski, Christopher Woodward, Geoff Yeadon, Benjamin Zidarich and many correspondents on Twitter.

  I am grateful to those photographers and rights-holders who have generously allowed me to use their images here. The photograph prefacing the First Chamber is the image of a hand stencil made in El Castillo cave in northern Spain; the earliest of the El Castillo stencils has been dated to at least 37,300 years old, and it is therefore possible that it was made by a Neanderthal artist. It is reproduced with permission of and © to La Sociedad Regional de Educacíon, Cultura y Deporte of Cantabria (SRECD). The photograph that prefaces Chapter 1, ‘Descending’, is by Ivana Cajina (@von_co) and is made available for free use under the @unsplash licence. The photograph of one of the Priddy Nine Barrows that prefaces Chapter 2, ‘Burial’, is © Richard Scott-Robinson. The photograph that prefaces Chapter 3, ‘Dark Matter’, is by Alexander Andrews (@alex_andrews) and is made available for free use under the @unsplash licence. The photograph that prefaces Chapter 4, ‘The Understorey’, is by Johannes Plenio (@jplenio), and is made available for free use under the @ pixabay/CCo Creative Commons licence. The photograph that prefaces Chapter 5, ‘Invisible Cities’, is of Le Passe-Muraille and is © Laura Brown (fuschiaphoto.com). The image that prefaces Chapter 6, ‘Starless Rivers’, is of the chamber at the bottom of the Abyss of Trebiciano, through which the Timavo river runs. It is an engraving by Giuseppe Rieger from the mid nineteenth century, and I am grateful to the Biblioteca Civica Attilio Hortis, Trieste, and E. Hapulca for permission to reproduce it here. The image that prefaces Chapter 9, ‘The Edge’, is Harry Clarke’s illustration to accompany Edgar Allan Poe’s story ‘A Descent into the Maelstrom’ when the story was reprinted in a 1919 edition of Tales of Mystery and Imagination; it is out of copyright. The
photographs prefacing Chapters 10 and 11, ‘The Blue of Time’ and ‘Meltwater’, are from our time in East Greenland and are © Helen Spenceley. The photograph prefacing Chapter 12, ‘The Hiding Place’, is of Onkalo and is © Posiva. The photograph prefacing Chapter 13, ‘Surfacing’, is of the Cueva de las Manos, the ‘Cave of the Hands’, in Patagonia in 2005; the hand stencils were made using ochre dust blown through a bone pipe, and have been dated to around 9,300 years ago. The image is generously made available by and is © Mariano Cecowski. The jacket photograph is of me approaching the crevasse labyrinth of the Knud Rasmussen glacier, East Greenland; it is © Helen Spenceley. All other images are my own.

  For the granting of textual permissions, I am grateful to James Maynard and the estate of Helen Adam for allowing me to quote from ‘Down There in the Dark’ as an epigraph. It is © the Poetry Collection of the University Libraries, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York. I am grateful to Alexey Molchanov for permission to publish his mother Natalia’s poem ‘The Depth’ in full. The only significant portion of this book to appear in any form before publication was ‘Secrets of the Wood Wide Web’, in the New Yorker online, edited by Emily Stokes; I am grateful to Emily and the New Yorker for permission to reuse sentences from that essay here.

  Underland could not have been completed without the support of the British Academy in the form of a Mid-Career Fellowship, for which I am grateful beyond easy expression. I am indebted to several other institutions and colleagues, above all Emmanuel College, Cambridge, where I have been privileged to teach for seventeen years now; also the English Faculty in Cambridge and the English Faculty Library (the best library beyond Babel). Among the music and musicians whose work has kept me company above and below ground, I could not have done without *AR, Bon Iver, the Duke Spirit, Elbow, Johnny Flynn, Grasscut, Willy Mason, the Pixies, Karine Polwart, Schubert, Cosmo Sheldrake and Le Tigre.

  The cover image of Underland is by my long-time friend and collaborator Stanley Donwood. I first saw his luminous painting Nether in 2013, the year after I’d begun work on Underland. It amazed me at first sight – the eerie glow of the sun, the curling technicolour fingers of the trees, the sense of looking down into a radiant, dangerous underworld – and I knew immediately that I wanted it to be the cover of my book. It’s huge, too: 1.5 square metres. Big enough to fall head first into – or down. At its simplest, indeed, the word ‘nether’ just means ‘down’, ‘downwards’. It more fully suggests, the OED records, ‘what lies, or is imagined as lying, beneath the earth; of, belonging to, or native to hell or the underworld’. Whenever I felt exhausted or unsettled by work on Underland – which was often – I would think of Nether. It lit the way.

  Except that while Nether looks like a vast sun rising at the end of a sunken lane, it’s not. I remember asking Stanley about the image when we were together one day on Orford Ness, the shingle spit off the Suffolk coast where nuclear weapons were tested in the decades after the Second World War. ‘Nether, Stanley said then, ‘isn’t the sun. It’s the last thing you’d ever see. It’s the light of a nuclear blast that has just detonated, seen down a holloway. When you look at Nether, you’ve got about 0.001 of a second of life remaining, before the flesh is melted from your bones.’ Oh. Lustrous and lethal, fatal and beautiful, nuclear and natural, the image beckons the viewer’s eye on and down into the underworld, into its reactor core. As such, it could hardly be truer to the atmospheres of Underland.

  INDEX

  Page numbers listed correspond to the print edition of this book. You can use your device’s search function to locate particular terms in the text.

  abseiling 11, 166, 195, 357–9

  Acheron, river 177, 178

  Adige, river 180

  Aeneas 16, 177

  Aeschylus: Agamemnon 363

  Africa gold

  mining 5–6

  South see South Africa

  Aggy cave system, Wales 159–60

  albedo 330

  Albrecht, Glenn 104, 113, 317

  Alcestis 191

  alluvium 353

  Alpine glaciers 14

  Altamira, cave art 255

  Alvarez, Al 155

  Amsterdam 171

  Andenes, Andøya 290, 298, 302

  lighthouse 300, 314

  Anderson, John 71

  Andøya, Norway 286, 289–323

  Andenes see Andenes, Andøya

  beach litter 319–20

  the Edge 294–5, 298–306

  fishing 291–2, 300–301, 303, 305, 306, 312–16

  and the oil industry 295–8, 301–6, 317, 322

  western mountains 318–19

  animacy 112

  annihilation products 68

  scattered electrons 59

  Antarctica

  British Antarctic Survey 346

  glaciers 357

  ice cap 340

  Mulvaney and 346, 350–51, 352

  search for oldest ice 352

  West Antarctic Ice Sheet 379–80

  anthrax 14, 329

  Anthropocene/Holocene epoch 13–14, 75–8, 113, 310, 320–21, 338, 350, 362, 363–4, 394, 407

  Anthropocene Working Group of the

  Subcommission on Quaternary Stratigraphy 75–6, 394

  Antigone 191–2

  Apusiajik glacier 341, 342–3, 346, 353, 355–62 365–6, 393

  aquifers 178, 239

  Arctic

  burial sites 329

  heatwave (2016) 330–31

  methane deposits 14

  sea ice 330, 331, 334–5, 336, 339–40, 354, 358, 362, 372, 379–80, 394

  see also Andøya, Norway; Baffin Island; Greenland; Lofoten islands

  Arctic Ocean 331, 360

  Ariadne 191

  ‘Ariadne’s thread’ 48, 49, 358

  Ario System, Spain 195–6

  Aristaeus 28

  Artemis 191

  Athapaskan oral traditions 380

  Attout, Jacques 194–5

  aurora borealis 122–3, 255, 346, 354, 365–6, 392

  Auschwitz death camp 282–3

  Australia

  Brisbane underland explorer 154

  Nullarbor Plain 179

  uranium mining 399

  Austria 32

  Aveline’s Hole, Mendips 25–6, 37, 417

  Aymé, Marcel 143

  bacteria 100

  Baffin Island 335

  Bailey, June 43

  Ballinger, Pamela 225

  Barents Sea 296–7

  Barro Colorado Island 106–8

  barrows 3, 27

  Bronze Age 30, 33–4, 51–2, 80

  Iron Age 80

  Neolithic 30, 80

  Priddy Nine Barrows 50–51, 52

  Barton, Hazel 192

  baryonic matter 57

  Basovizza/Bazovica 226

  Bataille, Georges 283

  batin (occult forces of underland) 247

  bears

  brown 26

  polar 307, 344–5, 359

  in rock art 26, 280, 282

  bedding planes 11, 49, 417

  Bede: The Reckoning of Time 81

  beetle, Anophthalmus hitleri 185

  Behar, Alberto 357–8

  Bélanger, Pierre 149

  Belgium, HADES facility 401

  Benford, Gregory 412

  Benjamin, Walter 132, 134, 135, 137

  The Arcades Project 133–6, 150–51

  Berger, John 279

  Berkner Island 350–51

  Bey, Hakim 142

  biodiversity 76

  biomass, global 100

  Bjerck, Hein 254, 264, 266, 275–6

  Blackwater 150

  Blautopf, Germany 197

  blindness 28

  Bloubank dolomites 192

  Blue Hole, Red Sea 198

  Boesmansgat system 197

  Bohr, Niels 337

  Bohuslän, Sweden 265–6

  boracite 60

  Borges, Jorge Luis: ‘On Exactitu
de in Science’ 413

  Borodale, Jane 27, 34

  Borodale, Louis 34, 44

  Borodale, Orlando 34

  Borodale, Sean 27, 28, 29, 30, 34–40, 43–4, 45–52

  Boulby, Yorkshire

  dark-matter detection laboratory 55, 60, 63–7, 73, 403

  mine 60–63, 69–74, 78–80

  Bradley, Richard: An Archaeology of

  Natural Places 265

  Brisbane underland 154

  Britain

  heatwaves revealing imprints of ancient structures 14

  karst landscapes 179

  see also Boulby, Yorkshire; Epping Forest; London; Mendip Hills, Somerset; Nine Wells Wood; Peak Cavern, Derbyshire; Pennine valley miners; Scotland; Somerset Levels; Wales; Yorkshire Dales British Antarctic Survey 346

  Browne, Thomas: Urne-Buriall 31, 351

  Brunel, Eliette 279–80

  Budapest labyrinth 199–200

  Bukkhammar Cave 264

  bunkers 141, 170, 309

  burial 4–5, 25–52

  in Austria 32

  barrows see barrows cairns 31, 265

  catacombs see catacombs cemeteries 25–7, 30, 80, 139–40, 265

  contamination from melting Arctic burial sites 329

  Egyptian 5, 65–6

  in Israel 32–3

  marks of 5, 80

  in Mendips 25–7, 30, 33–4

  mounds see barrows and mummification 5

  as an onwards journey 33–4, 265–6

  ossuaries 140–41, 142

  Parisian 136–7, 138, 139–43 see also catacombs: Paris and preservation 5, 27, 31

  Rising Star cave, South Africa 30–31

  in Thessaly (wall painting) 245–6

  urns 31, 33, 51

  of votive objects 26

  waste disposal through see waste disposal Bushman’s Hole, South Africa 197

  Cairngorms 209, 235, 345

  cairns, burial 31, 265

  calcite 4, 25, 37, 44, 417

 

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