Wednesday, September 16, 2015

THE SEA ON A WALL Mural:

"There is, one knows not what sweet mystery about this sea, whose gently aweful, stirrings seem to speak of some hidden soul beneath." 
- Herman Merville, author of Moby Dick, a novel about the saga of a great white whale.


Dr Abe V  Rotor
Panel A - Creatures of the Deep  
Panel B - Mangrove and Coral Reef 


Full view of the mural (6ft x 30ft)

The Sea on a Wall 

It is the sea of Ernest Hemingway, author of a prize-winning novel, The Old Man and the Sea, where a very old man caught the biggest fish in his life;

It is the sea of Moby Dick, a novel by Herman Melville, where a mad sea captain sought revenge against a great white whale, and lost at the end;

It is the sea of Rachel Carson, whose award-winning books The Silent Spring and The Sea Around Us started an environmental movement;  

It is the sea of Jacques Ives Costeau, French  explorer, filmmaker, who co-developed the Aqua-Lung, who pioneered in marine conservation. 

It is the sea of Charles Darwin that brought him to study Nature around the world for four years, and led him to formulate today's principle of evolution;  

It is the sea Christopher Columbus crossed, umcharted and perilous, and with strong determination and deep conviction, discovered the New World.

It is the sea that other great voyagers crossed in search of new land and treasures, and territories they conquered from indigenous inhabitants;

It is the sea where life began some two billion years ago, and the cradle of early life forms that evolved into both terrestrial and aquatic forms;
 
It is the sea that covers three-quarter of the earth's surface, and whose depth puzzles man more than its breadth as to what lies deep, deep below;    

It is the sea where land creatures went to live in the sea, and sea creatures became land dwellers, save the amphibians, certain fishes and reptiles;   

It is the sea that makes our planet habitable, the prime mover of vital processes such as the water cycle the precursor of  life, and link of land and sea;      

It is the sea that provides the route of human migration and integration, of trade  and culture, and the artery of globalization in our postmodern times;

It is the sea that is the source of great inspiration to the Humanities, from painting (Turner's Storm at Sea) to music (Claude Debussy's La Mer);

It is the sea that steels and hones our character, humbles us, deepens of love and respect for one another, and  brings us closer of our Creator.   


Old shipwreck lies at the bottom of the sea, reminiscent of sea tragedies in the past, and fiction stories like Jules Verne's Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. The giant octopus (kraken) adds legendary flavor to this children's favorite adventure story. The wreck is virtually unrecognizable and is now part of the sea, a manifestation of nature's superiority over man, and demonstration of homeostasis, that everything goes back to Nature.   

Full view of the dreaded kraken, the giant octopus that nearly sank Captain Nemo's proto-submarine. The kraken and its kin rule the coral reef and is almost intelligent in human standard -  crafty and master of mimicry and camouflage. Close to the kraken is the living fossil, Nautilus,  after whom Captain Nemo named the first submarine.    

Species of pelagic (free swimming) fish in schools are attracted at the photic zone where the sun nourishes the seaweeds and planktons, so with many other marine organisms that make up food chains and the food web. Sunlight passes through the water like a prism, the red and warm colors dominating the shallow depth while the blue and cool colors penetrate the deepest, up to a hundred meters. The photic zone is the richest in biodiversity in the open sea.  .  

Left: Kugtong or giant lapulapu (red) awaits for potential preys at its domain. The female can reach a size of 100 kgs. Right: Coelacanth (blue), a primitive fish thought to have become  extinct 40 million years ago has been discovered on the craggy seafloor of Madagascar.  Its fins and tails bear traces of the once bony appendages of its fossilized ancestors. Its secret of survival may lie on its isolation in the deep but studies show cooperation with other organisms like anemones, arthropods and echinoderms (such as red crabs and starfishes in the mural) has certainly played a major part in the survival of this primitive fish. 
 
Mangrove is nursery and abode of many organisms at the estuary, the zone where the river meets the sea.  Here a juvenile shark rests in the entangled roots, trumpet fish lie vertically with the reeds.  The root system is home to barnacles, mussels and other sessile organisms.  Detritus is trapped here, so with silt that otherwise flow out to sea.  It is the end of land and gateway to a vast marine environment - the intertidal zone. Air bubbles are formed as gases continuously evolve. 


 
The mural provides a make-believe scene under the sea that is enjoyed by viewers,  especially the children.The mural can be viewed on Kudyapi Street corner Lam-ang Street,. Lagro QC.
 

Author and artist Dr Rotor points to a pair of Blue Whales (Balaenoptera musculus) representated in scale with humans. The blue whale is a marine mammal belonging to the baleen whales. It feeds on krills (tiny shrimps) by the tons sieved by a filter-feeder system inside its mouth. At  30 metres in length and 180 tonnes or more in weight, it is the largest extant animal and is the heaviest known to have existed (bigger than the dinosaurs). Almost driven to extinction in the 20th century, the number has increased to about 5,000 to 12,000 blue whales worldwide today, thanks to various conservation programs of many countries. 

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