The Enemy is Nature: Military Machines and Technological Bricolage in Britain’s “Great Agricultural Experiment”
Cobbled-together machines are turned loose on nature in a desperate bid to coax peanuts from the soils of Tanganyika Territory.
Cobbled-together machines are turned loose on nature in a desperate bid to coax peanuts from the soils of Tanganyika Territory.
The introduction of plastic milk bags transformed parts of the Hungarian landscape.
How birds and poetry reacquaint us with an awareness of history and feelings of loss in Anthropocene nature reserves.
As virgin forests become carbon sinks and biodiversity hotspots, their coproduced history is consigned to oblivion.
This article discusses controversy over drainage tunnels in a Welsh lead mining region in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
The settler occupation of Central Brazil is the focus of nineteenth-century landscape art.
A reflection on the relevance of materialities in the history of the “Plastic Sea” of Almería.
The sea gives and the sea takes away. The story of the submerged forest at Redcar, England.
The long battle to protect Scarborough Beach’s coastal dunes demonstrates both the power and limitations of local grassroots advocacy groups.
Describing geothermal exploration traces and explosions at the “El Tatio” geyser field, this article explores the (in)visible trajectories of underground water.