Terra Incognita

Nutrimenti
Idee, conoscenze e comunità
per nutrire il futuro

Ogni epoca si definisce anche dal modo in cui si nutre: non solo di cibo, ma di idee, di relazioni, di immaginazione, di responsabilità verso il pianeta.
Con NutriMenti, edizione 2026 di Terra Incognita, vogliamo esplorare questa verità semplice e radicale: la nostra specie cresce grazie a ciò che alimenta la mente, il corpo e la comunità, e da questo equilibrio dipende la nostra capacità di affrontare le sfide più urgenti del presente.

Prossime esplorazioni

18-09-2042

Planetario di Fidenza

Fidenza, IT

23-09-2042

Giardino delle Meteore

Parma, IT

28-09-2042

Archivio Clima Futuro

Bologna, IT

28-09-2042

Archivio Clima Futuro

Bologna, IT

20-09-2042

Planetario di Fidenza

Fidenza, IT

24-09-2042

Bosco dei Possibili

Piacenza, IT

30-09-2042

Stazione Idrogeno Verde

Reggio-Emilia, IT

30-09-2042

Stazione Idrogeno Verde

Reggio-Emilia, IT

21-09-2042

Planetario di Fidenza

Fidenza, IT

27-09-2042

Laboratorio Terre Nuove

Modena, IT

01-10-2042

Cupola del Vento

Parma, IT

01-10-2042

Cupola del Vento

Parma, IT

Perché raccontiamo il domani

Siamo un collettivo di scrittori e ricercatori che intreccia dati scientifici e immaginazione per esplorare scenari possibili del nostro futuro.

Dalle crisi climatiche alle nuove ecologie urbane, trasformiamo numeri e studi in racconti accessibili, radicati nella realtà di Fidenza e oltre.

An expansive, hyper-realistic forest at dawn where ancient moss-covered trunks rise through mist, and in the undergrowth sleek metallic sensors and small, unobtrusive environmental probes glow with soft cyan indicators. A narrow trail of compressed earth winds through ferns and fallen leaves, leading toward a distant, faintly illuminated research station nestled between trees. Cool, diffused morning light filters through the canopy, mixing with subtle artificial glows from embedded smart stones along the path. Captured in wide-angle photographic realism with sharp focus in the foreground and gentle depth falloff toward the horizon, the mood is contemplative and hopeful, highlighting the meeting of advanced science and untouched nature, as if illustrating a quiet tale from the near future.
A crystalline iceberg fragment, floating in serene, dark teal Arctic water, partially encased in a transparent, futuristic monitoring shell with filigree-like sensors and tiny status lights. Above, the sky is overcast, casting soft, diffused light that emphasizes the ice’s intricate fractures and the shell’s smooth, glasslike surfaces. In the distance, blurred silhouettes of other ice formations and a barely visible modular research platform suggest a remote polar outpost. Shot in close-up from a low angle at water level, with droplets beading realistically on the shell, the composition uses the rule of thirds and shallow depth of field. The scene conveys a precise, professional mood, exploring data-driven climate science as an elegant narrative of the future.
A hyper-detailed terrarium the size of a large table, enclosed in ultra-clear glass with precisely engineered metal edges, containing a miniature, self-sustaining future ecosystem. Inside, rich soil layers, delicate moss carpets, tiny flowering plants, and a micro-stream with real water are carefully arranged alongside slender, embedded bioluminescent rods and almost invisible nutrient tubing. The terrarium sits in a clean laboratory environment with brushed steel counters and neutral walls. Soft, cool overhead lighting blends with gentle internal glows, creating subtle reflections on the glass. Photographed from a slightly elevated three-quarter angle in crisp photographic realism, the scene feels controlled yet alive, a professional visualization of experimental habitats that tell stories about the future of life on Earth.
A sleek, autonomous research drone shaped like a streamlined seed pod, its matte ceramic-white shell segmented by fine graphite-grey lines and tiny environmental sensors, hovering a meter above a windswept coastal cliff. Below, waves crash against stratified rock, and hardy grasses bend in the steady ocean breeze. Late-afternoon golden light grazes the drone’s surface, producing soft highlights and long, cinematic shadows on the ground. Distant offshore wind turbines, slightly blurred, punctuate the horizon. Captured from a low, slightly diagonal angle with moderate depth of field, the composition is dynamic yet orderly, rendered in photographic realism. The atmosphere suggests precise, forward-looking exploration of natural landscapes, as if the coastline itself is a protagonist in a future scientific narrative.

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Scrivici per collaborazioni, eventi, laboratori nelle scuole o per ospitare una nostra lettura scenica a Fidenza e dintorni.

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