The Hub’s Archipelago: The Connected Histories of Boston and Its Harbor Islands
The natural-looking Boston Harbor Islands have been shaped by the city of Boston for centuries, making them into urban islands.
The natural-looking Boston Harbor Islands have been shaped by the city of Boston for centuries, making them into urban islands.
José Paronella’s dream continues at Paronella Park despite catastrophic flood and cyclonic events.
Could the Crooked Creek Flood of 1846 be the reason we cannot find George DeBaptiste’s house?
The 1096 Earthquake and Tsunami extensively damaged coastal communities, but it was the shock to the capital that mattered more.
The Vietnam War introduced a new language for the environmental impacts of modern warfare, and 50 years later, profound long-term consequences for people and nature remain.
In the nineteenth century, the Chilean army developed a strategy to conquer the environment.
A centuries-old military island in the Helsinki archipelago is shaped by competing forces of abandonment and infrastructural development.
In the first half of the eighteenth century, the Portuguese Atlantic coast was affected by windblown sands moving from the ocean to inland areas.
This case in St. Petersburg, Russia, proves vegetation to be an actor in state politics of cultural landscapes.
This article explores the intersection of water management, manomin, and food insecurity for an Anishinaabe community in Northwestern Ontario.