Ever since, capitalism and conservation have shared much of the same ideological DNA. Take the nature-culture dichotomy—the idea that nature is somehow external to humans. Capitalists have long used that idea to justify treating nature as an object to be manipulated in the pursuit of endless economic growth.
The earliest map of 4000 years is known to be found in river valleys of Mesopotamia in Akkadian present in Iraq i.e a town of Babylon and is thus called the Babylon map of the world.
Roughly dating back to the 6th CE map as made up of clay and has a height of 12.2cm, and a width of 8.2 cm the waiting is in cuneiform. The map is in circular with two outer defined circles. The Outer circles represent water.
There are seven small circles on the map and appear to represent small cities. Some argue that the map belongs to the European middle ages.
The map is centered around the Euphrates that is falling from the north to the south bottom, Euraphate is labeled as a swamp.