Introduction to Chronosequence:
Repeated photography of the same scene over seasons and/or years has long been used by artists and scientists to document landscape change. This technique is especially relevant after major scene-changing events, such as wildfire, volcanic eruptions, and human land use activities. For this project, we selected 42 distinct photopoints that represent different forest conditions. During the first two years we photographed each photopoint 12 times in order to record the changing landscape following the fire.
Photopoint FRR 4