Linda Weintraub introduces eco-art strategies, genres, issues, and, approaches.
Linda Weintraub introduces eco-art strategies, genres, issues, and, approaches.
An account of the destruction in Nuremberg by major flooding along the Pegnitz River.
A curious and memorable incident with mice around the village Brochdorp near Hannover in 1675.
Natural scientific paper from 1753 with an illustration of a full-grown crocodile and a hatching baby as well as a lizard, reportedly the crocodile’s main food.
The broadsheet shows illustrations from a huge earthquake taking place in Italy in 1627.
The graphic reproduction shows the icebear hunt in Greenland, several sailing ships and boats from that time, the long-tailed monkey mentioned in the title, and even a whale in the background.
Elephants: their functions and their depiction around 1746.
An insight into the historic landscape of Württemberg.
The first in a projected series of video installations that seeks to explore the environmental humanities as a scholarly domain of growing significance.
Two graphs covering the last 420,000 years. One indicates the concentration of CO2 in the earth’s atmosphere, the other fluctuation in the average temperature on earth. Both include predictions for the remainder of the twenty-first century.