Essays On Air: Monsters in my closet – how a geographer began mining myths - a podcast by The Conversation

from 2018-03-29T01:05

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The Loch Ness Monster and other folk tales might not be pure fiction, but actually based on memories of events our ancestors once observed. Shutterstock

So you think the Loch Ness Monster never existed? Think again.



The science of “geomythology” is breathing new life into such stories. The Loch Ness Monster and other folk tales might not be pure fiction, but actually based on memories of events our ancestors once observed.



On today’s episode of Essays On Air, the audio version of The Conversation’s Friday essay series, I’m reading my essay on the geographical truths behind some of humankind’s most mysterious myths.



Traditional stories about age-old events might actually reveal clues about the geological history of the Pacific.



Through research of ancient oral knowledge, we have opened up opportunities for understanding the minds of our ancestors, more than we ever thought possible.



Today’s episode was recorded by Michael Lund and edited by Sybilla Gross. Find us and subscribe in Apple Podcasts, in Pocket Casts or wherever you get your podcasts.



Additional Audio



Snow by David Szesztay



Scenery by Kai Engel



Brand New World by Kai Engel



August (Summer Nights) by Kai Engel



Lake waves by Benconcan



Rumble by Unfa



Cinematic deep rumble by Mmasonghi



Low rumble by Tec studios



‘Monster’ rumble by Ecfike



Chanting (scary) by theartisticfellow



Thunder by Justkiddink



Single wave breaks by Dobroide



Explosion by tommccann



Hawaii volcanoes by e__



Fiji Island Singing by Joseph Galea



College campus ambience by Relebogile



Fiji Coup Latest: Journalists by AP Archive



Fiji: Ethnic Indians Flee the Unrest by AP Archive



Boots marching by stib



Military sounds by qubodup



Pages turning by zamazan



Pottery sounds by Tumbleweed3288



Didgeridoo by sandyrb



Native American style flute in A by Wood_Flutes



Hissing gas by Taberius



Library by artemis_ch



Celtic tin whistle by luis_audp

The Conversation

Patrick D. Nunn receives funding from the Australian Research Council, the Asia-Pacific Network for Global Change Research, Région Pays de la Loire (France), the University of the Sunshine Coast, and the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

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