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Rivers of the Anthropocene Phase 1 Videoconferences, 29-30 January 2013

Rivers presentation

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Page 1: Rivers presentation

Rivers of the Anthropocene

Phase 1 Videoconferences, 29-30 January 2013

Page 2: Rivers presentation

About the Rivers of the Anthropocene Project

Rivers of the Anthropocene is an interdisciplinary, comparative research project examining international river systems during the age of the Anthropocene. The first phase of the project focuses on the Ohio River and the River Tyne since 1750. Approaching rivers and their landscapes not simply as natural phenomena but as human artifacts, a group of international researchers seeks to provide a rich comparative history of the interactions between humans and their river environments. By mapping the ecological, geographical, cultural, social, political, and scientific histories of river systems, this research project will provide insight on current issues of relevance to public policy, environmental conservation, and heritage management.

www.rivers.iupui.edu

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About the Rivers of the Anthropocene ProjectRivers of the Anthropocene Organizers

•Berry, Helen, Professor of History in the School of History, Classics, and Archaeology at Newcastle University, United Kingdom

•Kelly, Jason M., Director of the IUPUI Arts and Humanities Institute and Associate Professor of History at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, USA

•Scarpino, Phil, Director of the IUPUI Public History Program and Professor of History at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, USA

Director of Undergraduate Research Team at IUPUI

•Dwyer, Owen J., Associate Professor of Geography at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, USA

www.rivers.iupui.edu

Page 4: Rivers presentation

About the Rivers of the Anthropocene Project

Research Team

•Aldred, Oscar, Research Assistant in Archaeology in the School of History, Classics, and Archaeology at Newcastle University, United Kingdom

•Bhaduri, Anik, Director of the Global Water System Project in Bonn, Germany•Carter, Timothy, Director of the Center for Urban Ecology, Butler University,

USA•Corsane, Gerard, Senior Lecturer in Heritage, Museum & Gallery Studies in the

International Centre for Cultural and Heritage Studies, School of Arts and Cultures and Dean for International Business Development & Student Recruitment in the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at Newcastle University, United Kingdom

•Deane-Drummond, Celia, Professor of Theology at the University of Notre Dame, USA

•Edgeworth, Matt, Senior Archaeological Investigator at English Heritage (Cambridge) andUniversity of Leicester Honorary Research Fellow in Archaeology, United Kingdom

•Ellis, Erle C., Associate Professor of Geography & Environmental Systems at the Laboratory for Anthropogenic Landscape Ecology at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, USA

www.rivers.iupui.edu

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About the Rivers of the Anthropocene Project

Research Team

•Filippelli, Gabriel, Professor of Earth Sciences and Director of the Center For Urban Health at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, USA

•Hale, Alex, Archaeological Projects Manager, Clyde River Project, Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland, United Kingdom

•Kane, Stephanie C., Associate Professor of Criminal Justice at Indiana University, Bloomington, USA

•Large, Andy, Senior Lecturer in Physical Geography in the School of Geography, Politics, and Sociology at Newcastle University, United Kingdom

•Lubinski, Kenneth, Fish and Wildlife Biologist at the Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center, United States Geological Survey, USA

•Martin, Pamela, Director of the Center for Earth and Environmental Science at Indiana University  Purdue University Indianapolis

•Meybeck, Michel, Senior Scientist at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique, Paris, France

•Newman, Caron, Research Assistant in Archaeology in the School of History, Classics, and Archaeology at Newcastle University, United Kingdom

www.rivers.iupui.edu

Page 6: Rivers presentation

About the Rivers of the Anthropocene Project

Research Team

•Pahl-Wostl, Claudia, Director and Professor of Resources Management at the Institute for Environmental Systems Research at the University of Osnabrück, Germany and Senior Research Fellow at the Stockholm Resilience Centre, Stockholm University

•Thornton, Nigel, Director of Agulhas Applied Knowledge, United Kingdom•Turner, Sam, Senior Lecturer in Archaeology in the School of Hi

story, Classics, and Archaeology at Newcastle University, United Kingdom•Williams, Mark, Senior Lecturer in Palaeobiology in the Department of Geology

at Leicester University, United Kingdom•Zalasiewicz, Jan, Reader in Palaeobiology in the Department of Geology at

Leicester University, United Kingdom

www.rivers.iupui.edu

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About the Rivers of the Anthropocene Project

Current Funding

•IUPUI Multidisciplinary Undergraduate Research Institute (MURI)

•IUPUI International Development Fund

Institutional Support

•IUPUI Arts & Humanities Institute

www.rivers.iupui.edu

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Rivers of the Anthropocene Project: Phase 1 Conference

On January 23-25, 2014, we will hold an international and interdisciplinary three-day workshop / symposium in Indianapolis, IN.

During Stage I, research will be focused on river systems in North America and Europe, with the Ohio River in the U.S. and the Tyne River in the UK as organizational centerpieces. The proximity of IUPUI to the Ohio and Newcastle University to the Tyne and the comparative similarities made these rivers logical choices as focal points.

www.rivers.iupui.edu

Page 9: Rivers presentation

Rivers of the Anthropocene Project: Phase 1 Conference

Using two historically significant river systems, the Ohio and the Tyne, as case studies, the “big” questions the conference seeks to answer are primarily of two types — conceptual and methodological:

• How do scholars from across the disciplines frame the problems of environmental change differently? In what ways does an international, comparative perspective alter their approach?

• How do scholars from across the disciplines create an Earth Systems Science model(s) that accounts for both emergent environmental patterns and the agency of human individuals and societies?

• In what ways do human systems have a palpable effect on earth systems, and what is the most useful way for humanists, social scientists, and scientists to address them?

• In what ways does an international, interdisciplinary, and collaborative approach to international river systems create new answers and provoke new problems for environmental scholarship?

www.rivers.iupui.edu

Page 10: Rivers presentation

Rivers of the Anthropocene Project: Phase 1 Goals

During Phase 1, the researchers will focus on building a research model that integrates the theoretical, methodological, and empirical approaches of disciplines and specialties from the sciences to the humanities.

The group will meet in January 2014 for a 3-day symposium and workshop, the papers from which will be edited as part of an open access, peer reviewed volume.

www.rivers.iupui.edu

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Rivers of the Anthropocene Project: Phase 1 TimelineJanuary 2013: Initial videoconferences with participants

February 2013: Establish Working Groups

May-July 2013: MURI Project (historical data sets and GIS)

May 2013: Meeting at GWSP Conference

June 2013: Videoconference 1 for Working Groups

October 2013: Videoconference 2 for Working Groups

December 2013: Pre-circulation of Papers

January 2014: Rivers of the Anthropocene Phase 1 Symposium

April 2014: Chapter Drafts Due

www.rivers.iupui.edu