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And God said, 'Let the
water under the sky be gathered to one place,
and let dry ground appear.' And it was so. God
called the dry ground 'land,' and the gathered
waters he called 'seas.' And God saw that it was
good. Then God said, 'Let the land produce vegetation:
seed-bearing plants and trees on the land that
bear fruit with seed in it, according to their
various kinds.' And it was so. The land produced
vegetation: plants bearing seed according to their
kinds and trees bearing fruit with seed in it
according to their kinds. And God saw that it
was good. And there was evening, and there was
morning the third day. (Genesis 1:9-13, New International
Version)
Human life is life on and from the land, even
if we walk on cement pavement and buy our food
at the supermarket. While most of us in the United
States today live in cities, and few of us live
as close to the soil as the people of biblical
times, what we do nonetheless depends on and has
an impact on the ecological processes that take
place on the surface of the earth. We do well
to remember God’s powerful words to the
ancient Israelites: “The land is mine and
you are but aliens and my tenants." (Leviticus
25:23b)
The surface of the earth is a variegated patchwork
of habitats fields and forests, wetlands
and mountain wildernesses, deserts and prairies
each with their own collection of nonhuman
inhabitants. While we have turned many of these
landscapes to our own use, some we have set aside
as wildlife reserves and wilderness areas, thus
recognizing that we are not the sole inhabitants
of the planet.
At the same time, land is “property”
as well as habitat. Decisions about land use and
environmental regulations that affect how individuals
or businesses can use their lands, or who has
access to public lands and for what uses, are
politically charged and even explosive. Land use
issues are often, if not always, environmental
justice issues.
Agriculture is the human activity most
directly tied to the land, but our economy makes
use of other resources on and under the land in
addition, such as timber, minerals, and fossil
fuels. Urban development and transportation
networks consume land and compete with
these other uses and with the preservation of
wildlife habitat.
In the ecological web
of life, materials and energy flow between the
land, the atmosphere, the waters
and human bodies in never-ending cycles,
carrying with them pollutants as well as what
is needed to sustain life and health.
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