
Arts & Ideas Rocks
Nov 21, 2025
Anjana Katwa, an earth scientist and author, shares how rocks whisper tales from deep time, while Rosemary Hill delves into the cultural significance of Stonehenge's stones. Peter Frankopan explores how geology influences history and geopolitics, shedding light on resource-driven conflicts. Philosopher Graham Harman discusses stones' roles in object-oriented ontology, suggesting they have agency. Poet Sarah Jackson reflects on the poetic connection to rocks, emphasizing the need for broader geological language to address environmental justice and the hidden stories in our landscape.
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Rocks As Deep-Time Storytellers
- Rocks embody deep time and can reorient human perspective beyond daily concerns.
- Anjana Katwa argues stones whisper ancient stories that ground us in geological history.
Deep Time Enabled Darwinian Thought
- Charles Lyell's uniformitarianism extended timeframes and displaced Biblical chronologies.
- Rosemary Hill links this geological shift to Darwin's ability to conceive evolution by natural selection.
Soil, Slavery, And Political Legacies
- Peter Frankopan links fertile soils from chalk deposits to concentrated slave plantation economies.
- He describes how geology shaped long-term demographic and political legacies in U.S. counties.








