Bombs and Biodiversity: A Case Study of Military Environmentalism in Australia
The history of Puckapunyal Military Training Area illustrates how war and the environment interact in sometimes unexpected ways.
The history of Puckapunyal Military Training Area illustrates how war and the environment interact in sometimes unexpected ways.
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 1960s, real-time aerial observations supported mixed forms of land use in African national parks.
In the second half of the nineteenth century, the establishment of Keppel Harbour would lay the foundations for Singapore to become a logistics city.
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.
This article examines how issues of representation and aesthetics have impacted the environmental history of early modern Europe.
Biodiversity offsetting and the contradictions of the capitalist production of nature in England.
Describing geothermal exploration traces and explosions at the “El Tatio” geyser field, this article explores the (in)visible trajectories of underground water.