Blood in the Water: A Digital History Project on the Geography of Pontiac’s War, 1763
Digital tools reveal a geographic logic to the violence of Pontiac’s War.
Digital tools reveal a geographic logic to the violence of Pontiac’s War.
This article shows how rural collective action in tropical Australia transformed plantations into small farms in the late nineteenth century.
In the 1790s, Spanish naturalists traveled the vast realms of the Spanish Americas to seek out useful and commodifiable resources.
Once introduced to promote the fur industry, beavers in Tierra del Fuego are now deemed an invasive population to be eradicated.
When the mystical marketing of Himalayan medicines elides the social and ecological worlds of Himalayan meadows.
Historic transportation reliant on unpredictable rivers and underfunded railways contributed to the long-term economic fortunes of Malawi.
This essay examines the history of venomous snake research conducted by the Boston-based United Fruit Company starting in the 1920s.
This article explores the intersection of water management, manomin, and food insecurity for an Anishinaabe community in Northwestern Ontario.
Cobbled-together machines are turned loose on nature in a desperate bid to coax peanuts from the soils of Tanganyika Territory.
This article explores the impact of colonialism upon the marginalized communities of Bombay Presidency via the history of locust outbreaks.