“As you read through TCLF’s annual Landslide and lament the loss of irreplaceable cultural and historical sites, get angry and then get busy. The planet needs you,”- Jon Jarvis
On November 6th, 2019, The Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF) unveiled Landslide, its annual thematic report about threatened and at-risk landscapes, Living Nature. Living Nature highlights landmark areas of historical and cultural significance that are being impacted by human-induced climate change. The website, live here, allows users to click on different site and read a summary of its history, its current threats, and what people can do to help. Jonathan B. Jarvis also supplied an introduction to the report/ website where he explains the realtionship between climate change and nature expressing how " The current climate crisis requires “all hands on-deck,” and the cultural landscape community has important lessons to share in a unified vision for conservation, in addition to sounding the alarm. Alarms, after all, have been ringing now for at least a decade, and only a few have awoken. Read more of Jon's introduction here.