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New
Jersey: The Natural State Photographs by Dwight Hiscano Foreword by Pete Dunne Rutgers University Press, 2000 |
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| So,
the urban corridor seen from the New Jersey
Turnpike is not all there is to New Jersey after all. This photographic
celebration of the state's natural beauty and environmental riches
introduces
places like the densely forested Kittatinny Ridge, a wilderness area
called
the Great Swamp, and the improbably immense Pine Barrens. |
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Photographing
nature in an urban state can be
challenging, Hiscano admits. "Avoiding litter, graffiti,
distant
cell towers, power lines, and passing airplanes can be difficult when
composing
an image. Minor acrobatics are often necessary to find the right angle,
and a much more intimate approach is required. Instead of shooting
lakes
and mountains, I'm more likely to point my lens toward a tree or
flower,
a small stream, perhaps, or skyward, toward the sunset; it's all
natural,
though something unnatural may lie just out of view." |
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| New Jersey may
be the most densely populated
state in the U.S. but, as this volume testifies, the human population
is
highly concentrated, leaving some room for natural places, if you know
how to look for them |
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