
“When Amalia Salas Casales was a child, those waters ran clear. She moved through a vast network of canals lined with chinampas — the floating agricultural islands that once fed Mexico City. She learned to cook with native ingredients harvested from the lake system, following recipes passed down through generations — some made with species that have since disappeared. The water was clean enough to drink, the ecosystem abundant with life.”
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The activists say that human and animal hair has the capacity to separate hydrocarbons from water, with one kilogram of hair capable of cleaning up 8 liters of oil.
PHOTO OF THE DAY
Sunset cloud over Jocotepec | Photo by Brett Phillips
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