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Preserving Geological Heritage

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August 29, 2017

What is the issue?

  • Billions of years old geological features are being vandalised in many areas in the country in the name of developmental activities.
  • Efforts need to be taken to safeguard our geological structures.

What is the significance of geological structures?

  • India’s tumultuous geological past is recorded in its rocks and landscapes.
  • They should be considered as our non-cultural heritage.
  • The eological impacts of the distruction of geological sites are also a major concern in this era of rapidly changing climate patterns.

How vulnerable are these structures?

  • Land sections containing fossils & geo-faults are lost forever due to construction of highways and real estate development.
  • India accounts for more than 30% of stone production in the world.
  • This industry has been unscientifically mined and managed.
  • It is generally outside the pale of public scrutiny, and remains unregulated.
  • Along with weak environmental laws governing it, India’s topography and geological heritage stand to be lost forever.
  • The Geological Survey of India is the agency entrusted with the protection of geological features.
  • More than 26 sites have been selected for targeted preservation.
  • But not much has changed on the ground.

What should be done?

  • A comprehensive inventory of geological structures in the country needs to be created by GSI.
  • A sustainable conservation approach for our natural geological heritage should be formulated as it has been done for biodiversity.
  • Geological features that should be declared as national assets include bodies of unusual rock or mineral types, landforms holding records of natural events of the past & significant fossil localities.
  • Geo-conservation should be made a major factor in land use planning.
  • Stringent legal framework needs to be evolved to support such conservation strategies.
  • Educational outreach programmes about these treasures need to be organised for officials, politicians and the public.

How to educate people?

  • The collective memory reinforced through memorials & museums will make communities aware.
  • Japanese initiative - The Kobe earthquake memorial park in Japan preserves a section of the fault line (around 150m) which ruptured during the 1995 disaster through the town of Hokudan.
  • We could emulate this Japnese model to preserve the memory of major geological events.
  • On this line, the now-defunct Kolar gold mines could be developed into a geological museum with an educational outreach unit for students.

 

Source: The Hindu

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