A Crab’s-Eye View of the Food Chain in Contemporary China
This article rethinks Chinese foodways and invasive species from a crab’s perspective.
This article rethinks Chinese foodways and invasive species from a crab’s perspective.
María Valeria Berros discusses the recognition of nature’s rights in Ecuador.
This article focuses on the loss of the Sambisa Forest as a game reserve due to the conflict between the Nigerian army and the terrorist group Boko Haram.
The water shop was a crucial part of the traditional water supply system in imperial and early modern China.
Describing geothermal exploration traces and explosions at the “El Tatio” geyser field, this article explores the (in)visible trajectories of underground water.
Environmental activism in the 1960s forced the Army Corps of Engineers to limit the open-water dumping of dredge spoils in the Great Lakes and create new “natural” areas along the shore.
The Riwo Sangchö is a Buddhist purification ritual that has become popular in response to the Coronavirus in Sikkim, India.
An early Australian conservationist offers a window onto the ways in which nature was once valued.
The settler occupation of Central Brazil is the focus of nineteenth-century landscape art.
Indigenous groups in Nayarit, Mexico, reaffirmed their sacred environmental sites through social movement.