Lecture Theatre 002
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An Environmental History of Plants and People
The study of past environmental change provides insights on how societies historically created and managed landscapes, grew crops, tended arboreal resources, and adapted these methods to a changing climate. Past environmental change is inferred through the analysis of layers of sediments in water bodies, peats and wetlands that preserve signals of the surrounding landscapes and human activities at the time of their deposition.
Professor Bronwen Whitney’s inaugural lecture explores past socio-environmental change through an examination of archives situated not in urban centres, but within landscapes that were managed for the plants of everyday use.
Professor Whitney’s research is based in the tropical Americas, where she explores socio-environmental interactions before and after the significant alteration of land use caused by European colonisation. She also explores how environmental archives give voice to non-elites in history and enable us to understand domestic production and management of natural resources in past environments.
About the Speaker
Professor Bronwen Whitney is a Professor in the Department of Geography and Environmental Sciences. She studied for her PhD at the University of Edinburgh (2005 – 2009) where she examined climate and vegetation change from the last glacial period until present in the world’s largest tropical wetland. She continued her research into human and climatic causes of tropical environmental change and joined Northumbria University in January 2015.
Professor Whitney’s research is based in the tropical Americas, where she explores socio-environmental interactions before and after the significant alteration of land use caused by European colonisation. She also explores how environmental archives give voice to non-elites in history and enable us to understand domestic production and management of natural resources in past environments.
To register for this free lecture, please fill in the form below.
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Squires Building
Stage 2
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Northumbria University
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Room 304 - Business Hub, Sandyford Building
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