New #OnlineFirst articles are available now in the #AnthropoceneReview journal! π
Check out our latest research and review articles here:
https://t.co/P5EHWAyBjc
Together with Earth System science and geology, what third discipline shaped the early conceptual history, assimilation and application of the term 'Anthropocene'?
Read the new #OnlineFirst and #OpenAccess article by author Eugenio Luciano to find out: https://t.co/h0l4cowgkJ
A new #OnlineFirst research article by Jan K Kazak and other authors examines how individual communities are involved in the energy transition and regional patterns in energy supply and demand. Check it out here:
https://t.co/h2Uuq5J27w
.@JBRGreen revisits the methodological historicism of New Deal-era economic thinking as a guide for redefining strategies of green transition.
By @AnthropoceneRev
https://t.co/HvUzCBTHiY
Our December 2022 issue is available now! To find a range of thought-provoking research articles and reviews pertaining to the #Anthropocene, please visit: https://t.co/pfKpDEIylx
What are the negative synergies between earth system changes and geological destratification process? Find out more through this paper by Nigel Clark and Lauren Rickards: https://t.co/bmMLeeJPQV
In our latest #Onlinefirst article, author Evi Zemanek explores multimedia discourses on resilience and vulnerability, through images of nature in popular documentaries with David Attenborough. Find the article on: https://t.co/36DrqD4Mcm
"Views from nowhere, somewhere and everywhere else: The tragedy of the horizon in the early Anthropocene" by Bob Frame & Nicholas A Cradock Henry. Read the full article at: https://t.co/upFDMmC0bE
In this paper by Joana Gaspar de Freitas, the author proposes an innovative approach to coastal dunes as hybrid environments. Read more on: https://t.co/raoVkCFAWr
Authors Benedict Singleton and others discuss the role and use of Traditional Ecological Knowledge in Environmental Science studies. Find the full paper at: https://t.co/CUVAYUmYmP
Authors Christoph Rosol and colleagues discuss how we can trace ongoing transitions in the Earth system back to the regional scales using the Mississippi River Basin (MRB) as a model. Read more on:
https://t.co/LEEkaj2SV3
In one of our recent special issue article, Catherine Russel and colleagues discuss the geological #evolution of the #Mississippi#River into the #anthropocene.
Read more on: https://t.co/x6LsGAl8Qs
Motivated by #bio-inspired ##solutions, this recent paper by Thomas Speck and colleagues discuss the changing boundaries between living and technical systems in the Anthropocene. Read more on: https://t.co/RCcS1FYk55
What were the major drivers of #fire regime change in mainland, southeast #Australia during and prior to European colonization? Find out more through this recent #OnlineFirst paper by Matthew Adeleye and colleagues:
https://t.co/KZ71yKyCk9
In our latest #OnlineFirst article, @CaleGushulak and colleagues investigates novel siliceous algae assemblages from Crawford Lake (Ontario, Canada) and its significance to the Anthropocene Epoch. Read the full article on: https://t.co/TpEVWHLZdx