Developing a human-environment timeline: a chronology of ideas and events for the anthropocene

Date

2018-12-01

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Volume Title

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Abstract

Clearly, the character of the relationship between humans and their environment has changed over time. Scholars have developed a geologic timeline and a timeline for life, but there is not a human-environment timeline. The proposed new geologic epoch of the Anthropocene is inadequate for encapsulating the diversity of the human-environment relationship throughout history and prehistory. This dissertation initiates conversation about developing an official human-environment timeline. Oriented from the perspective of a geographer, this exploratory research involved the qualitative analysis of human-environment events and ideas from a series of four geographic encyclopedias. A human-environment timeline emerged from this research, as well as a hierarchical typology of time periods: durations, duration revolutions, scenes, scene transitions, and intervals. The timeline was then interpreted according to four “ways of knowing”: normal science, cultural ecology, political ecology, and humanistic geography. This research supports inquiry into how time periods can be employed to better understand and communicate the human-environment relationship through time.

Description

Keywords

Anthropocene, Human-Environment, Periodization, Timeline

Graduation Month

December

Degree

Doctor of Philosophy

Department

Department of Geography

Major Professor

John A. Harrington, Jr.

Date

2018

Type

Dissertation

Citation