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50 Times Nature Won The Battle Against Civilization (New Pics)
CuriositiesMAR 3, 2021

50 Times Nature Won The Battle Against Civilization (New Pics)

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We humans often build roads and bridges, canals and ports, even entire cities at the expense of the environment. But nature isn't planning on giving up. On the contrary, it is determined to persevere, showing just how fragile our creations are.
Maybe you remember our earlier list on Mother Nature reclaiming its territories, maybe not, but time passes and bricks continue to crumble, so Bored Panda decided to refresh your memory on the topic.
We put together a new batch of photos to show that nature is a force to be reckoned with and that ultimately, the world belongs to it. As much as we would like to think otherwise.

#1 Tree That Grew From The Inside Of An Abandoned Chimney

Tree That Grew From The Inside Of An Abandoned Chimney
558points

A cool example of how nature takes back what rightfully belongs to it is Tikal, one of the most famous remnants of the Maya civilization. When author and journalist Alan Weisman hiked through the surrounding region, he discovered something fascinating on his way: "You're walking through this really dense rainforest, and you're walking over hills," Weisman told Live Science. "And the archaeologists are explaining to you that what you're really walking over are pyramids and cities that haven't been excavated."

We know about sites like Tikal because humans have gone to great efforts to dig up and restore their remains. Meanwhile, countless other ruins remain hidden, sealed beneath forest and dirt. "It's just amazingly thrilling how fast nature can bury us," Weisman said. 

#2 The Gate Keeper At The Abandoned Putzar Castle In Germany

The Gate Keeper At The Abandoned Putzar Castle In Germany
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447points

#3 Found This Beautiful Tree Growing Inside An Abandoned Silo While I Was Exploring

Found This Beautiful Tree Growing Inside An Abandoned Silo While I Was Exploring
444points

This scene from Guatemala's rainforest allows us a glimpse of what our planet could look like if humans were no more. Lately, have been getting snippets of this idea, as the global COVID-19 pandemic has kept people inside, encouraging animals to return to our quieter urban environments. Weisman, who wrote The World Without Us, spent several years interviewing experts and systematically developing scenarios that would unfold in our planet if we disappeared.

#4 This Chinese Fishing Village Was Abandon In The 1990s. Nature Has All But Reclaimed It (Houtouwan, China)

This Chinese Fishing Village Was Abandon In The 1990s. Nature Has All But Reclaimed It (Houtouwan, China)
428points

#5 Old Shiva Temple Firmly Embraced By The Sacred Bodhi Tree In Bangladesh

Old Shiva Temple Firmly Embraced By The Sacred Bodhi Tree In Bangladesh
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421points

In his research, Weisman started by taking a look at cities, where some of the most dramatic and immediate changes would occur, thanks to a sudden lack of human maintenance. Without people to run pumps that divert rainfall and rising groundwater, the subways of huge sprawling cities like London and New York would flood within hours of our disappearance. "[Engineers] have told me that it would take about 36 hours for the subways to flood completely," he said. 

#6 This Tree Grew Inside The Stop Sign

This Tree Grew Inside The Stop Sign
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409points

#7 Railroad Tracks In The Forest (Taiwan)

Railroad Tracks In The Forest (Taiwan)
396points

Without human oversight, glitches in oil refineries and nuclear plants would go unchecked, likely resulting in massive fires, nuclear explosions, and devastating nuclear fallout. "There's going to be a gush of radiation if suddenly we disappear. And that's a real wildcard, it's almost impossible to predict what that's going to do," Weisman explained.

In the wake of our demise, we would also leave behind mountains of waste — much of it plastic, which would likely persist for thousands of years, with huge effects on wildlife.

#8 This Vine Climbed Up A Chair To Silence My Wind Chime

This Vine Climbed Up A Chair To Silence My Wind Chime
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393points

#9 Boat Wreck Reclaimed By Nature And Turned Into An Island

Boat Wreck Reclaimed By Nature And Turned Into An Island
376points

Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) — human-made chemicals such as PCBs that currently can’t be broken down in nature — would also leave a mark. "Some of these POPs may be around until the end of time on Earth. In time, however, they will be safely buried away." The combined rapid and slow release of all the polluting waste we leave behind would undoubtedly have damaging effects on surrounding habitats and wildlife, however, that doesn't necessarily mean total destruction: one quick look at the rebounding of wildlife at the site of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster shows that nature can be resilient on short timescales, even under such extremes.

Meanwhile, petroleum waste that spills or seeps into the ground at industrial sites and factories would be broken down and reused by microbes and plants in just a few decades. 

#10 Abandoned Synagogue

Abandoned Synagogue
370points

#11 Abandoned Castle In Ireland

Abandoned Castle In Ireland
368points

#12 Real Grass Growing Through The Fake Grass

Real Grass Growing Through The Fake Grass
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363points

With all that polluting legacy unfolding, water running underground in cities would corrode the metal structures that hold up the streets above subterranean transport systems, and whole avenues would collapse, transforming suddenly into mid-city rivers, Weisman said.

Over successive winters, without our regular de-icing, pavements would crack and provide new niches for seeds to take root — carried on the wind and excreted by overflying birds — and develop into trees that continue the gradual dismemberment of pavements and roads. The same would happen to bridges. Add some general degradation and these structures could collapse within a few hundred years. 

#13 A Friend Found This Out Hiking And Posted It On FB, Thought It Was Pretty Cool

A Friend Found This Out Hiking And Posted It On FB, Thought It Was Pretty Cool
I'm assuming the fabric and padding created a moist coarse surface for the moss to exploit.
359points

#14 The Roots Grow According To The Pavement Pattern

The Roots Grow According To The Pavement Pattern
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309points

#15 An Agave Growing Massive In This Long-Abandoned Greenhouse

An Agave Growing Massive In This Long-Abandoned Greenhouse
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306points

#16 Found A Tree Growing Through A Stone Wall

Found A Tree Growing Through A Stone Wall
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301points

With all this fresh new habitat opening up, nature would march in, pasting over the formerly concrete jungle with grasslands, shrubbery, and dense stands of trees. Weisman said that would cause the accumulation of dry organic material, such as leaves and twigs. "Fires are going to create a lot of charred material that will fall to the street, which is going to be terrific for nurturing biological life. The streets will convert to little grasslands and forests growing up within 500 years," he said.

#17 Tree Growing Around A Hiking Sign

Tree Growing Around A Hiking Sign
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297points

#18 130,000-Year-Old Neanderthal Skull Encased In Stalagmites, Found In A Sinkhole In A Cave In Italy

130,000-Year-Old Neanderthal Skull Encased In Stalagmites, Found In A Sinkhole In A Cave In Italy
295points

#19 Abandoned Bridge In New Zealand

Abandoned Bridge In New Zealand
284points

#20 This Tree Has Grown Round The Railing

This Tree Has Grown Round The Railing
276points

According to Weisman, buildings would degrade from hundreds of years of damage from erosion and fire. The first to topple would be modern glass and metal structures that would shatter and rust.

On the other hand, "buildings that will last the longest are the ones made out of the Earth itself" — like stone structures, Weisman added. But even those would ultimately become a softened version of themselves: the defined, iconic skylines we know so well today would disappear.

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