The Multispecies Ethnography and Artistic Methods (MEAM) Conference is being organized by the MEAM Network and will be held on July 3rd and 4th, 2023 in Liège, Belgium, as well as online….
Category: Events
There is a loss of control that humans face when dealing with the consequences of climate change. Accordingly, the upcoming Illusion of Control Conference problematizes this loss of control. The conference will…
Dr. Philip Slavin’s seminar “The Birth of the Black Death: Biology, Ecology and Climate in Tian Shan in the Early Fourteenth Century” considers the context around the beginning of the Plague in…
Dendrochronologist Andrea Seim will give a seminar in English on the topic “Historical forest cover and timber availability during the last millennium in central Europe: insights from tree rings and pollen”. As…
BRIDGES sponsored, partnered and co-organized sessions at the Learning Planet Festival (24-28 January 2023) All times shown are CET. Tue, January 24, 2023 The Assembly: Learning Planetizens Unite! Organised by The…
We are hosting our 4th online LACHES (Latin American and Caribbean Historical Ecology Seminars) seminar on October 3rd, 2022. Email contact[at]ihopenet.org to register and receive the passcode to join. October 3 16-18…
5 September, Innocent Pikirayi 16-18 (Stockholm time) https://uu-se.zoom.us/j/64762014406 The Ecology of Water, Great Zimbabwe Recent research at Great Zimbabwe interpreted…
Welcome to the 3rd LACHES seminar on Monday August 1st at 4 pm (Swedish time)! https://uu-se.zoom.us/j/63767034974 16-16.40. Anthropogenic Changes in Lowland and Insular Ecuador By Florencio Delgado Espinoza, Department of Liberal Arts (Universidad…
Welcome to our 2nd LACHES Seminar 6 June 16-18 Elizabeth Graham, Institute of Archaeology, University College London, The Waste of Time and Soil Security. Graham has been interested in the long-term impact…
The Department of Archaeology at the University of Cambridge is continuing its Historical Ecology Garrod Research Seminar Series with: Modelling ‘The Dawn of Everything’: How Simulating a Complex Yesterday Might (Not) Help…