What Living in Space Teaches Us about Living on Earth
To live among the stars always meant solving the down-to-earth problem of sustainable waste management.
To live among the stars always meant solving the down-to-earth problem of sustainable waste management.
The Power and the Water: Connecting Pasts with Futures examines the nature of environmental connectivities since industrialization and how their legacies challenge us in the early 21st century.
Odinn Melsted traces Reykjavík’s transition from coal to geothermal energy.
Sean Patrick Adams explores coal storage and expansion in nineteenth-century America.
This article examines early twentieth-century China’s top-down scheme of managing rivers based on watershed.
From channelizations to renaturations—the catastrophic flood of the Gürbe River in July 1990 prompted profound changes in approaches to flood protection.
Through an ethnographic account about the use of an electromagnetic water system in the Amish community, Nicole Welk-Joerger explores the conceptual meeting ground between sacred and secular worldviews in efforts that address the Anthropocene.
This volume explores the question of whether science should be centered in climate-change communication.
Schur Petri demonstrates how local health workers can effectively communicate climate risks on the ground.
Between 1905 and 1912, experts on fisheries and hydraulic engineering collaborated in order to erect a fishway at the Hemelinger dam.