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 Introduction 
 Mediated Nature 
 Sponsor Trap 
 Generation of Extinction 
 Archival Environment 
 Credits 
 About the Artists 
Phagamys orthodonMus musculus muralis
 Hypnomys morpheus
 Hypnomys mahonensis
 Thyrrhenicola hanceni
 Pitymys bavaricus
 Mammothus primigenius
 Equus hemionus anatoliensis
 Equus ferus silverstris
 Prolagus sardus
 Prolagus corcianus
 Nesiotites similis
 Nesiotites corsicanus
 Panthera tigris virgaes
 Panthera pardus tulliana
 Panthera leo europaea
 Felis lynx sardiniae
 Sinotherium sardus
 Canis lupus minor
 Canis lupus deiesnus
 Hippopoesmus sp.nov
 Mecodema punctellum
 Candibrervus ropalophorus
 Candibrervus rethymnensis
 Myotragus balearicus
 Capra pyrenaica pyrenaica
 Capra pyrenaica lusiesnica
 Anthicus antiochensis
 Aplothorax bunrchelli
 Atelothrus transiens
 Blackburnia insignis
 Chaetotrechiana kiuchii
 Disenochus micantipennis
 Ishikawatrechus intermedius
 Rangifer esrandus
 
 |     Introduction 
  
The relationship between online creativity and offline ecology are at play in this 
 Internet artwork by Transnational Temps. NOVUS.EXTINCTUS begins 
with the observation that while thousands of domain names are registered each year for new Web sites, 
simultaneously thousands of species are falling into extinction. 
 This juxtaposition of creation and extinction challenges simplistic notions of 
technological progress, generally, and invites more specific enquiries into the promise of
the Information Age.   NOVUS.EXTINCTUS reframes the game-like processes of e-culture,
trying to see how productive cultural enterprises contribute to the 
process of extinction.
 
The website mimics the procedure content providers use to establish their Internet
domain names.   Offering as free the Latin names of recently extinct species, NOVUS.EXTINCTUS
highlights the momentous die-off that is making the names available.   Visitors 
are then led through a confusing production process that culminates in the futile generation of
codes to replace the missing species.  
NOVUS.EXTINCTUS was inspired by search engines specializing in images.   When using them
to locate images of endangered animals online, one finds that images of animals
are often more numerous than the animals themselves in the wild.   This suggests that 
a remarkable inversion is taking place.  Real animals and plants that formerly occupied taxonomists 
are disappearing, while at the same time it seems there are not enough names available to identify 
all of the new phenomena being created in cyberspace.  
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