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Episode details

Radio 4 Extra,28 Jul 2011,30 mins

My Empire Of Dust

Available for 24 days

Cologne-based artist Wolfgang Stoecker has collected samples of dust from historic buildings across Europe and beyond. With the help of scientists and an electro-microscope at Augsburg University, he’s analysed the dust and discovered it contains tiny fossils, dust from the Sahara, pollutants of various kinds and human debris. Aeolian research, research into dust particles and sediments, is an established branch of geographical study, often concerned with the history and future of climate change, desertification and landscape erosion. But as Wolfgang has discovered, dust can also tell us something about human culture. John Campbell is the Dean's Verger at Lincoln Cathedral. He received Wolfgang's initial email with some scepticism but it made sense too, because dust is often on his mind as the person responsible for the upkeep of this great building. He collected two samples for Wolfgang's collection: 'secular' dust near the entrance, where the traffic of feet is greatest, and 'sacred' dust, near the altar, where traces of candles, incense and sacred silverware are to be found. Everyone leaves a trace of themselves behind in the dust. Producer Mary Ward-Lowery First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in July 2011.

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