Of Ghost Nets and the Haunting at Nissum Bredning
This article follows “the Danish Society for a Living Sea” and their engagement with ghost nets and “local haunting dynamics.”
This article follows “the Danish Society for a Living Sea” and their engagement with ghost nets and “local haunting dynamics.”
Making more beer for eighteenth-century London’s growing population increased the need for clean water. Efforts to guarantee supplies to the brewers had an effect on both urban and rural landscapes.
A close reading of the tourist spectacle devised to give a hydropower company an environmentally- and socially-friendly image.
This article presents examples of ancient conceptions of rivers as more-than-human agents and their struggle with humans.
This article examines how issues of representation and aesthetics have impacted the environmental history of early modern Europe.
In 1929, the Kondopoga hydroelectric power station was built and resulted in the damming of Lake Girvas and the diversion of the Suna River. This transformation of landscape resulted in the near loss of one of Russia’s foremost nature sites: the Kivach waterfall.
An exploration of environmental and cultural history of the Irish Sea via the sinking of the RMS Leinster during WW1.
With the drying of its sister lake for purposes of agricultural development, Pamvotis is suffering accelerating degradation.
An account of the 1795 mass drowning on Lough Derg in Ireland’s County Donegal.