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W 9:30 am–12:00 pm
Anderson Hall, Room 230

Geology is a conception of the planet’s surface as thick, resource-rich, and energy-latent, forming slowly in the deep time of the earth. Laced within its dense layers of rock and shifting plates, the crust contains the raw materials and 
carbon fuels of the technosphere: bands of iron ore, veins of mineral deposits, seams of coal, and vast fields of oil. Our everyday worlds are sourced from these geologies—fracking, cracking, mining, drilling, processing, and 
burning—feeding a supply chain essential to the production and powering of the built environment. Critically, these materials have spatial qualities and attitudes, producing a complex infrastructure of capital, energy, and heat. Yet while 
these geologies constitute the substructure of modern life—determining its urban scales, circulatory flows, and organizational forms—they also devastate landscapes, bodies, and climates. Learning from spatial and material tactics that 
intercede in these extractive processes, this seminar seeks to trouble the persistence and durability of the hydrocarbon toward a deeper conception of geology: a planetary assemblage of landscapes, ecologies, organisms, technologies, 
and atmospheres. Through reading discussions, visual research explorations, and field visits around Houston, this seminar reimagines the relationship between architecture and extraction in the Anthropocene. 

 
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