Thursday, April 23, 2009

What I have been reading lately #24

I have recently finished reading Robert Sullivan's excellent book, The Meadowlands: Wilderness Adventures at the Edge of a City.  From reading this book, I learned about the many interesting items that can be found or previously could be found in this wilderness/wasteland just a few miles west of New York City.  The list includes (in no particular order):
  • many of the AM radio transmitters for New York City radio stations;
  • abandoned copper mines:
  • abandoned clay pits previously used for digging up clay to make bricks;
  • salt hay farms;
  • failed land development schemes;
  • the cities of Newark and Secaucus (to name only two);
  • garbage dumps (both in use and no longer in use) containing such items as rubble from the London Blitz, leachate (the liquid that trash makes after it has sat for a while), and fires (both above and underground);
  • toxic waste, including, but not limited to, mercury, chromium, naphthalene, methylene chloride, toluene, and ethylbenzene;
  • hunters, fishers, and swimmers;
  • sports facilities for professional sports teams;
  • highways and railways;
  • lunatic asylums;
  • organized crime murder victims (including, possibly, Jimmy Hoffa - pictured below);
  • hotels;
  • factories;
  • pig farms;
  • chemical and oil refineries;
  • piles of coal;
  • hills made from garbage;
  • the Kearny, NJ Library, which boasts of having the world's largest collection of foriegn-language translations of Gone With The Wind;
  • soccer stars, including John Harkes, Tab Ramos, and Tony Meola;
  • cedar forests;
  • mosquitoes;
  • buried pirate treasure; and
  • the ruins of the original Penn Station from New York City.
Above, the Meadowlands; below, Jimmy Hoffa.

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"Hockey ought to be sternly forbidden, as it is not only annoying but dangerous." Halifax Morning Sun, quoted in Michael McKinley's Hockey - A People's History