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Sacred Soil by Robert Tindall, Frederique Apffel-Marglin and David Shearer
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Sacred Soil

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Sacred Soil by Robert Tindall, Frederique Apffel-Marglin and David Shearer
Paperback $19.95
Jul 18, 2017 | ISBN 9781623171186

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    Jul 18, 2017 | ISBN 9781623171186

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  • Jul 18, 2017 | ISBN 9781623171193

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Praise

“The highly qualified authors of Sacred Soil show us a way forward toward restoring our garden planet, shifting the Earth’s carbon balance from the oceans and the sky to the soil and living vegetation, where it can nourish our hearts, blood, and bones and ensure our collective thriving. It is up to all of us to act on this knowledge.”
—Ian Baker, author of The Heart of the World
 
“A visionary manifesto and a pragmatic, solutions-oriented approach to how we can heal our connection with the Earth as well as our kin in the bacterial world, Sacred Soil offers a path for modern people to understand the world, as many indigenous cultures do, as a vast sentient organism.” 
—Daniel Pinchbeck, author of Breaking Open the Head: A Psychedelic Journey into the Heart of Contemporary Shamanism
 
“Tindall, Apffel-Marglin, and Shearer have taken a seemingly arcane topic and turned it into a compellingly readable book on ecology, indigenous wisdom, sustainable development and our relationship with nature. Highly recommended!”
—Mark Plotkin, PhD, Amazon Conservation Team

“Sacred Soil is a major contribution to healing the septic split dividing spirit from matter, and culture from nature, that is poisoning all life. With soil as its exemplar—at once material, biological, and sacred—this book reminds us that we are part of a greater world that is alive, intelligent, and whole.”
—Patrick Curry, author of Ecological Ethics
 
“Magic flows in Sacred Soil, and realism beckons throughout the mythopoeic, historical, anthropological, and scientific perspectives on times, characters, and the fecundities of life. These authors join imaginative writing, distinctive research, and interdisciplinary engagement with environmental concern in this magnificent account of how ceramic shards, burials, and the processes of life-death make biochar soil.”
—John A. Grim, Forum on Religion and Ecology at Yale
 
“Over the last decades botanists and ecologists working in the forests of the Amazon have found large but isolated expanses of terra preta—black soil, clearly of human origins—showing that indigenous peoples did not simply slash and burn and move on, but chose instead to stay put, actively enhancing the agricultural potential of the land, with charcoal for nutrient retention, and organic waste as compost. A book examining the significance of these new revelations, and indeed celebrating the potential of such indigenous technologies, has been long overdue.”
—Wade Davis, professor of anthropology, University of British Columbia


“A superb historical, ethnographic, fictional, scientific, and applicable account of one of the wonders of humanity—the anthropogenic black earth of the Amazon—this changes our perception of pre-Columbian Amazonian societies, their knowledge, complexity, and the extent of their spiritually-imbued contribution to biodiversity. Most importantly, this work clearly indicates possible contemporary applications of Amerindian concepts and techniques to most needed environmental regeneration.”
—Luis Eduardo Luna, director of Wasiwaska Research Center
 
“This groundbreaking book reveals the hidden story of the astonishing and profoundly ethical civilization of the Amazonian Indians. For millennia the indigenous peoples of the Amazon rain forest constructed a civilization of harmonious coexistence of humans, plants, animals, physical entities, and the intangible spiritual beings that inhabit the quantum world. And they did it by creating and recreating their own healthy environment. This jewel of a book is a breath of pure utopian air.”
Stefano Varese, PhD, professor emeritus, University of California, Davis

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