ABSTRACT
This chapter consists of three threads along which I explore what it might mean to view the forming landscape as an integral part of an area’s heritage. The aim is to decenter the human and extend the concept of multivocality to include the more-than-human voices, and the multiple temporalities, that shape our cultures, technologies and experiences with us. Heritage processes, from this perspective, are not only about what we take with us into the future but also, and possibly more importantly, about what is left behind and what this continues to become. Drawing from theoretical perspectives about deep-time, experiential wandering and historical archive images, I consider how these threads draw together and intertwine, and speculate how and what might be remembered in the future.
