When nature smiles with teeth bitten by ice

By 04/05/2023 #!31Fri, 05 May 2023 09:44:31 +0000Z3131#31Fri, 05 May 2023 09:44:31 +0000Z-9+00:003131+00:00x31 05am31am-31Fri, 05 May 2023 09:44: 31 +0000Z9+ 00:003131+00:00x312023Fri, 05 May 2023 09:44:31 +0000449445amFriday=97#!31Fri, 05 May 2023 09:44:31 +0000Z+00:005#May 5th, 2023#! 31Fri, 05 May 2023 09:44: 31 +0000Z3131#/31Fri, 05 May 2023 09:44:31 +0000Z-9+00:003131+00:00x31#!31Fri, 05 May 2023 09:44:31 +0000Z+00:005# Portal

Until not long ago, traveling to Antarctica was similar to traveling to another planet; a strange place, inhabited by penguins that greet you in an unknown language. Something like this says Daniele Del Giudice in his book moving horizon (Book Attic, 2016), a job where the royal journey to the end of the world intersects with another imaginary trip to the same place and even richer in adventures, where the Italian author remembers what he never experienced as if he had lived it, making evident the premise that false memories have existed since the human being tried to remember something for the first time.

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Un halo alrededor de la luna en la Antártida, parhelio pintado a acuarela por Wilson durante la expedición en el Terra Nova en 1911.