Results for 'Arctic'

141 found
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  1.  7
    Arctic Sanctuary: Images of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.Jeffrey A. Jones & Laurie K. Hoyle - 2010 - University of Alaska Press.
    Guided by photographer Jeff Jones's sure and well-developed vision, Arctic Sanctuary leads the reader on a remarkable journey that few of us will ever take in real life: a trek deep into Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. By turns celebratory and contemplative, emotionally evocative and beautifully fierce, this collection of lyrical essays and stunning panoramic photographs pays homage to a vast and remote land that remains untamed by technology and undisturbed by human development. A rare window into a (...)
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  2.  12
    (1 other version)Arctic Summer.Alphonso Lingis - 2014 - Environment, Space, Place 6 (1):33-53.
    A summer spent in the Scandinavian Arctic changes the sense of seasons: the Sámi know eight seasons; the visitor finds summer in the valleys, winter above, in the mountains, and winter below, in the permafrost underfoot. The summer spent in movement makes one understand the force of movement and initiative in human life, the sedentary and the nomadic instincts. The seasonal migrations of reindeer and the periodicity of lemming years make one explore movements of humans that are not launched (...)
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  3.  75
    The benefits of Indigenous-led social science: a mindset for Arctic sustainability.Jeffrey J. Brooks & Hillary Renick - 2024 - Humanities and Social Sciences Communications 11 (Article number 1599).
    The Peoples of the Arctic and Arctic health and sustainability are highly interconnected and essentially one and the same. An appropriate path to a sustainable Arctic involves a shift away from individual learning and achieving toward community leadership and the betterment of society. This article draws upon mindset theory from Western psychology and Indigenous relational accountability to propose and outline a model for achieving sustainability in the Arctic. The geographic focus is the North American Arctic. (...)
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  4.  27
    Invisibility, Colors, Snow: Arctic Biosemiotics and the Violence of Climate Change.Gitte du Plessis - forthcoming - Theory, Culture and Society:026327642097679.
    This article conceptualizes contemporary geopolitical violence in the Arctic through a semiotic register. Different living beings perceive different things, and these differences amount to different worlds, not merely different worldviews. Building on Eduardo Kohn’s reading of the semiotics of Charles Sanders Peirce, and theorists of biosemiotics and ecosemiotics, the article analyses how signs in and between living organisms and their environments are political matters of life and death. Via the themes of invisibility, colors, and snow, the article traces semiotic (...)
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  5.  19
    Arctic observers: Richard King, monogenism and the historicisation of Inuit through travel narratives.Efram Sera-Shriar - 2015 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 51:23-31.
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  6.  12
    Out of the Ivy and into the Arctic: Imitation Coral Reconstruction in Cross‐Cultural Contexts.Donna Bilak - 2020 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 43 (3):341-366.
    This essay discusses imitation coral reconstruction workshops based on a recipe from a sixteenth‐century “book of secrets” that took place in three different educational contexts: Columbia University, Nunavut Arctic College, and Universität Hamburg. It reflects on the utility of reconstruction and material literacy as present‐day history of science methodologies in which scholarly textual interpretation meets physical research. It also considers the nature of cultural heritage in shaping material practice through an Inuit cultural context, in which the acquisition and dissemination (...)
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  7.  35
    Is Canada Entitled to the Arctic?Margaret Moore - 2020 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 50 (1):98-113.
    This article is interested in the general question of what justifies territorial rights over unoccupied places, including places that are not occupied but are situated within the territorial borders of a state. This question arises because one of the most common defenses of rights over territory makes use of the idea of occupancy and has difficulty explaining such rights in places that are not occupied. It explores this question through an examination of the claims and arguments in the Canadian (...), which provides an historically specific test case for the merits and plausibility of the various arguments appealed to. It argues that territorial rights in unoccupied places, including the Canadian Arctic, are justified on different grounds than in occupied parts of the territory, and that the justification also affects the kinds of rights—particularly over resources—that such states can claim. (shrink)
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  8.  41
    Arctic 2.0: How Artificial Intelligence Can Help Develop a Frontier.Patrick Lin & Fritz Allhoff - 2019 - Ethics and International Affairs 33 (2):193-205.
  9.  36
    The Arctic Sky: Inuit Astronomy, Star Lore, and Legend. John MacDonald.Birgitte Sonne - 2000 - Isis 91 (3):563-563.
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  10.  34
    Chronometers on the arctic expeditions of John Ross and William Edward Parry: With notes on a letter from Messrs. William Prkinson & William James Frodsham.Trevor H. Levere - 1994 - Annals of Science 51 (2):165-175.
    The search for the Northwest Passage in the years following the Napoleonic Wars provided both a market and testing ground for marine chronometers. Long voyages and extreme temperatures challenged the best chronometers. Among the firms seeking to meet those challenges was that of William Parkinson & William James Frodsham. Their chronometers performed particularly well in the Arctic, as John and James Clark Ross, William Edward Parry, and Edward Sabine gladly recognized. The way in which chronometers were made and sold, (...)
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  11.  16
    The Unappreciated Significance and Source of Meaning in Wild Landscapes: An Arctic Case.Chris Dunn - 2024 - Environmental Values 33 (6):626-647.
    Wild places are rich with meaning. This runs contrary to accounts of vast undeveloped regions like the Arctic as being devoid of meaning (and thus open for—or even in need of—resource exploitation) and to accounts that dismiss conceptualizations of the Arctic as containing substantial wilderness landscapes as an invalid colonial concept. There is rather an unappreciated commonality between Indigenous conceptions of place and conceptualizations of wilderness: both recognize undeveloped landscapes as substantial founts of meaning that are not the (...)
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  12.  17
    New Tendecies of International Legal Regulation of the Arctic.Saulius Katuoka - 2009 - Jurisprudencija: Mokslo darbu žurnalas 117 (3):239-249.
    The article presents a geographic position of the Arctic. Legal regimes of the Arctic and the Antarctic are compared. In a geographical terms, the Arctic is part of the ocean that is covered by ice, and Antarctic is a continent covered by ice which is surrounded by an ocean. It follows that Arctic should be considered a part of the world’s ocean, which is governed by 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. Currently, a (...)
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  13.  11
    The Conquest of the Arctic. Louis Segal.Charles Kofoid - 1940 - Isis 32 (2):398-399.
  14.  20
    The Role of International Institutions and Organizations in Sovereignty Conflicts in the Arctic.Lydia Schoeppner - 2014 - Journal for Peace and Justice Studies 24 (1):50-86.
    Increased melting of Arctic sea ice due to climate change attracts interests of national states who sense the potential that opening northern waters will enhance access of the Northwest Passage (NWP) and subsoil resources. Claims for Arctic sovereignty include conflicts around the status of the NWP, ownership of resources, but also attempts of Inuit to decolonize through the establishment of self-government in their respective countries that receive a new urgency due to the effects of climate change. From a (...)
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  15.  34
    The Lab and the Land: Overcoming the Arctic in Cold War Alaska.Matthew Farish - 2013 - Isis 104 (1):1-29.
    ABSTRACT The militarization of Alaska during and after World War II created an extraordinary set of new facilities. But it also reshaped the imaginative role of Alaska as a hostile environment, where an antagonistic form of nature could be defeated with the appropriate combination of technology and training. One of the crucial sites for this reformulation was the Arctic Aeromedical Laboratory, based at Ladd Air Force Base in Fairbanks. In the first two decades of the Cold War, its employees (...)
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  16.  47
    The Frontstage and Backstage of Corporate Sustainability Reporting: Evidence from the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Bill.Charles H. Cho, Matias Laine, Robin W. Roberts & Michelle Rodrigue - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 152 (3):865-886.
    While proponents of sustainability reporting believe in its potential to help corporations be accountable and transparent about their social and environmental impacts, there has been growing criticism asserting that such reporting schemes are utilized primarily as impression management tools. Drawing on Goffman’s self-presentation theory and its frontstage/backstage analogy, we contrast the frontstage sustainability discourse of a sample of large U.S. oil and gas firms to their backstage corporate political activities in the context of the passage of the American-Made Energy and (...)
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  17. The Stone Men of the Canadian Arctic.Roger Caillois & Rosanna Rowland - 1976 - Diogenes 24 (94):78-93.
    To the memory of the ephemeral goddess Sedna, whose huge body reached out across the depths of the Arctic seas, whose hair was forever matted, full of ordure, clogged with bear furs and the snouts of narwhales, and could be combed only by a shaman on one of his cosmic journeyes.The inukshuk are piles of rough stone, shaped like men, and found on the coasts of the Canadian Arctic. I am well aware that they have never found a (...)
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  18.  18
    Sentient Entanglements and Ruptures in the Americas: Human-Animal Relations in the Amazon, Andes, and Arctic.Maggie Bolton & Jan Peter Laurens Loovers (eds.) - 2023 - BRILL.
    This book brings together anthropological studies of human-animal relations among Indigenous Peoples in three regions of the Americas: the Andes, Amazonia and the American Arctic. Through ethnographic essays, the authors illustrate and compare entanglements of human and other-than-human lives.
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  19.  8
    Nietzsche's arctic zone of cognition and post-structuralism.David Parent - 1989 - History of European Ideas 11 (1-6):759-767.
  20.  18
    Human Security of the Indigenous Peoples in the Arctic. The Sami Case.Agnieszka Szpak - 2017 - International Studies. Interdisciplinary Political and Cultural Journal 20 (1):75-96.
    For many years, indigenous peoples, their rights, culture and identity have been neglected. This depressing statement also refers to the Sami who reside in the Arctic. This paper presents the understanding of the term “indigenous peoples” and a number of their rights, including the right to selfdetermination. Their implementation is necessary for human security as they empower indigenous peoples to make decisions in matters that affect them. The author examines the concept of human security and the threats to this (...)
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  21.  32
    Bergmann’s Rule, Adaptation, and Thermoregulation in Arctic Animals: Conflicting Perspectives from Physiology, Evolutionary Biology, and Physical Anthropology After World War II.Joel B. Hagen - 2017 - Journal of the History of Biology 50 (2):235-265.
    Bergmann’s rule and Allen’s rule played important roles in mid-twentieth century discussions of adaptation, variation, and geographical distribution. Although inherited from the nineteenth-century natural history tradition these rules gained significance during the consolidation of the modern synthesis as evolutionary theorists focused attention on populations as units of evolution. For systematists, the rules provided a compelling rationale for identifying geographical races or subspecies, a function that was also picked up by some physical anthropologists. More generally, the rules provided strong evidence for (...)
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  22.  36
    Sir John Richardson, Arctic Explorer, Natural Historian, Naval Surgeon. Robert E. Johnson.Nelson Lankford - 1979 - Isis 70 (1):183-184.
  23. Science and the Canadian Arctic: A Century of Exploration.Trevor H. Levere & A. Savours - 1994 - Annals of Science 51 (6):681-681.
     
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  24.  16
    The Vegan Viewer in the Circum-Polar World; Or, J. H. Wheldon’s The Diana and Chase in the Arctic.Jason Edwards - 2018 - In Emelia Quinn & Benjamin Westwood (eds.), Thinking Veganism in Literature and Culture: Towards a Vegan Theory. Springer Verlag. pp. 79-106.
    “The Vegan Viewer in the Circum-Polar World” examines, in unprecedented detail, The Diana and Chase in the Arctic, a canvas by the little-known, early-nineteenth-century marine painter, James Wheldon, part of a local Hull School of painters focused upon depictions of Arctic whaling. The chapter contextualizes the iconography and materiality of the canvas within a broader discussion of the humanimal tragedy of Victorian whale hunting, as conceptualized, for the first time, by a specifically ethical vegan viewer, pondering not only (...)
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  25.  12
    Vulnerability of Submarine Cable Network of Mainland China: Comparison of Vulnerability between before and after Construction of Trans-Arctic Cable System.Yongshun Xie & Chengjin Wang - 2021 - Complexity 2021:1-14.
    The submarine optical-fiber cable is a large connectivity infrastructure, which plays an important role in international communication, cyber-physical systems, and even national security. Although submarine cable network interruption may cause serious consequences, researching its vulnerability has not attracted much attention. This paper proposes a quantitative method to measure the vulnerability of the submarine cable network and evaluates the influence of the upcoming trans-Arctic cable system on the submarine cable network of mainland China. To address this issue, first, the submarine (...)
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  26.  24
    Unsolved Mysteries of the Arctic. Vilhjalmur Stefansson.Francis Johnson - 1940 - Isis 32 (1):212-214.
  27.  36
    William F. Althoff. Arctic Mission: 90 North by Airship and Submarine. xviii + 264 pp., illus., apps., bibl., index. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 2011. $39.95, £25. [REVIEW]Tina Adcock - 2014 - Isis 105 (1):242-243.
  28.  29
    Charcoal Dispersal from Alpine Stallo Hearths in Sub-Arctic Sweden: Patterns Observed from Soil Analysis and Experimental Burning.Greger Hornberg & Lars Liedgren - 2012 - Asian Culture and History 4 (2):p29.
    To evaluate dispersal patterns and concentrations of macroscopic charcoal particles around Stollo settlements in sub-arctic Scandinavia, their distributions following experimental burning and soil concentrations around an alpine Stollo settlement dating between AD 700 and 1150 were recorded. After the burning 98% of recorded particles were 0.1-0.5 mm long, 90% were dispersed within 40 m of the fire, their mean concentration 40 m from the fire was 0.14±0.08 particles/cm2 and the concentration decreased with increasing distance. At the settlement, 95% of (...)
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  29.  29
    The phenomenology of Samuel Hearne's journey to the coppermine river (1795): Learning the arctic.William C. Horne - 2005 - Ethics, Place and Environment 8 (1):39 – 59.
    Recent critiques have selected textual evidence for casting Hearne as a failed narrator, because he did not live up to the mercantile or imperialist expectations for late 18th-century explorers, or as a biased narrator, because he never fully moves beyond such valuations. But if we categorize phenomenologically Hearne's experiences as a student of the Arctic throughout his four-year journey, there is more textual evidence for reading it as the account of a civilized narrator's conflicted adaptation to an indigenous society (...)
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  30.  21
    Magnetic instruments in the Canadian Arctic expeditions of Franklin, Lefroy, and Nares.Trevor H. Levere - 1986 - Annals of Science 43 (1):57-76.
    Magnetic observations were essential for polar navigation, and were carried out systematically on both sea and land-based expeditions to the Canadian Arctic throughout the nineteenth century. John Franklin took a particular interest in magnetic studies and encouraged the Admiralty to adopt Robert Were Fox's dip circle. The establishment of the Toronto magnetic observatory provided a base for John Henry Lefroy's survey of the North West Territories. The Royal Navy's programme of magnetic research, commenced in the aftermath of the Napoleonic (...)
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  31.  8
    Social, Material and Political Constructs of Arctic Childhoods: An Everyday Life Perspective.Pauliina Rautio & Elina Stenvall (eds.) - 2019 - Singapore: Imprint: Springer.
    This book addresses the geopolitical notion of the 'Arctic' through the everyday experiences of children. It explores the Arctic as various materializations that matter to, condition and define childhoods in Nordic countries. Presenting nine thematically very different but theoretically and methodologically coherent studies, it enables readers to gain an in-depth understanding of a selection of recent sociomaterialist, posthumanist and post-anthropocentric research on childhood in the Nordic context. The book offers new ideas and insights as to what matters in (...)
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  32.  12
    Circumpolar Science: Scandinavian Approaches to the Arctic and the North Atlantic, ca. 1920 to 1960.Sverker Sörlin - 2014 - Science in Context 27 (2):275-305.
    ArgumentThe Scandinavian countries share a solid reputation as longstanding contributors to top level Arctic research. This received view, however, veils some deep-seated contrasts in the ways that Sweden, Norway, and Denmark have conducted research in the Arctic and the North Atlantic. In this paper it is argued that instead of focusing on the geographical determinism of science – the fact that the Arctic is close to, indeed part of, Scandinavian territories – we should look more closely at (...)
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  33.  15
    Locating the Boundaries of the Nuclear North: Arctic Biology, Contaminated Caribou, and the Problem of the Threshold.Jonathan Luedee - 2021 - Journal of the History of Biology 54 (1):67-93.
    This essay is a historical–geographical account of how scientists and public health officials conceptualized and assessed northern radioactive exposures in the late 1950s and 1960s. The detection of radionuclides in caribou bodies in northern Canada both demonstrated the global reach of nuclear fallout and revealed the unevenness of toxic relations and radioactive exposures. Following the documentation of the lichen–caribou–human pathway of exposure, Canadian public health officials became increasingly concerned about the possibility of heightened radioactive exposures among Indigenous northerners. Between 1963 (...)
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  34.  23
    Andrew Stuhl. Unfreezing the Arctic: Science, Colonialism, and the Transformation of Inuit Lands. viii + 232 pp., figs., bibl., index. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press, 2016. $35. [REVIEW]Rebecca Priestley - 2017 - Isis 108 (4):940-941.
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  35.  64
    Compromise and original acquisition: Explaining rights to the arctic.Cara Nine - 2015 - Social Philosophy and Policy 32 (1):149-170.
  36.  14
    The Russians in the Arctic: Aspects of Soviet Exploration and Exploitation of the Far North 1937-1957 by Terence Armstrong. [REVIEW]Erwin Hiebert - 1963 - Isis 54:513-513.
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  37.  20
    Review of the Autobiography of Josef Svoboda, Canadian Arctic Climate Scientist. [REVIEW]Geoffrey Woollard - 2018 - Scientia et Fides 6 (2):201-210.
    In Wine from Raisins, Josef Svoboda, a Canadian arctic climate scientist, tells the story of his own life that encompassed 20th-century history and winds up facing the most important questions of the 21st century - questions about what we have learned from nature, what we have done to our environment and who we will become as we drift away from the natural world toward one immersed in our own technological creations. Readers of Wine from Raisins will glimpse the world (...)
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  38.  35
    Ike’s folly in Greenland: Kristian H. Nielsen & Henry Nielsen: Camp Century: The untold story of America’s secret Arctic military base under the Greenland ice. New York: Columbia University Press, 2021, 342 pp, $30.00 PB.David M. Watry - 2022 - Metascience 31 (1):101-103.
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  39.  43
    Nonmarket cooperation in the indigenous food economy of taimyr, arctic russia: Evidence for control and benefit.John Ziker - 2004 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (4):571-571.
    Empirical data on food sharing in native Dolgan, Nganasan, and Nenets communities in Siberia provide evidence for hunter control over big game and fish, as well as likely benefits of inter-household sharing. Most food sharing occurs with kin and, thus, kin-selection-based nepotism cannot be ruled out. Reciprocal interhousehold sharing at meals occurs less often. Social context is discussed.
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  40. Epistemic Responsibility and the Inuit of Canada's Eastern Arctic: An Ecofeminist Appraisal.Douglas Buege - 1997 - In Karen Warren (ed.), Ecofeminism: Women, Culture, Nature. Indiana Univ Pr. pp. 99--111.
     
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  41.  34
    Birth Order, Age, and Hunting Success in the Canadian Arctic.Peter Collings - 2009 - Human Nature 20 (4):354-374.
    What explains variation in hunting success? This paper examines foraging success among Inuit hunters, paying particular attention to factors that account for differential returns in hunting. Although there are several possibilities for explaining hunting success, this study finds that birth order and age are important predictors of foraging returns. Furthermore, data on food sharing suggests that birth order has important effects on the distribution of food. That is, early-born hunters not only produce more food, they give much of that food (...)
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  42.  33
    The Rise of the Leisure Class: Adolescence and Recreational Acculturation in the Canadian Arctic.Richard G. Condon - 1995 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 23 (1):47-68.
  43.  38
    Under Ice: Waldo Lyon and the Development of the Arctic Submarine. William M. Leary.Gary Weir - 2000 - Isis 91 (4):812-814.
  44.  14
    Rendering Inuit cancer “visible”: Geography, pathology, and nosology in Arctic cancer research.Jennifer Fraser - 2020 - Science in Context 33 (3):195-225.
    ArgumentIn August of 1977, Australian pathologist David W. Buntine delivered a presentation at the Annual Meeting of the Royal College of Pathologists of Australia in Melbourne, Victoria. In this presentation, he used the diagnostic category of “Eskimoma,” to describe a unique set of salivary gland tumors he had observed over the past five years within Winnipeg’s Health Sciences Center. Only found amongst Inuit patients, these tumors were said to have unique histological, clinical, and epidemiological features and were unlike any other (...)
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  45.  28
    Science for profit. What are the ethical implications of bioprospecting in the Arctic and Antarctica?David K. Leary & David W. H. Walton - 2010 - Ethics in Science and Environmental Politics 10 (1):1-4.
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  46. Ecospaces : Desecration, sacrality, place. Restoring earth, restored to earth : Toward an ethic for reinhabiting place / Daniel T. Spencer ; caribou and carbon colonialism : Toward a theology of arctic place / Marion Grau ; divining new orleans : Invoking wisdom for the redemption of place / Anne Daniell ; constructing nature at a chapel in the Woods / Richard R. bohannon II ; felling sacred Groves : Appropriation of a Christian tradition for antienvironmentalism. [REVIEW]Nicole A. Roskos - 2007 - In Laurel Kearns & Catherine Keller (eds.), Ecospirit: Religions and Philosophies for the Earth. Fordham University Press.
     
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  47. Department of Sociology, University of Alaska, College, Alaska Anaktuvuk Pass in the heart of the Brooks Range is about l20 miles from the Arctic Ocean. It is home for ll0. [REVIEW]Sarkis Atamian - 1965 - In Karl W. Linsenmann (ed.), Proceedings. St. Louis, Lutheran Academy for Scholarship. pp. 15--184.
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  48.  22
    Michael Bravo and Sverker Sörlin , narrating the arctic: A cultural history of nordic scientific practices. Canton, ma: Science history publications/usa, 2002. Pp. IX+373. Isbn 0-88135-385-X. $39.95. [REVIEW]Sigurjon Hafsteinsson - 2004 - British Journal for the History of Science 37 (3):364-365.
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  49.  15
    Nanna Katrine Lüders Kaalund, Explorations in the Icy North: How Travel Narratives Shaped Arctic Science in the Nineteenth Century Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2021. Pp. 230. ISBN 978-0-8229-4659-5. $40.00 (hardback). [REVIEW]Daniella McCahey - 2023 - British Journal for the History of Science 56 (1):123-124.
  50.  31
    P.J. Capelotti, Shipwreck at Cape Flora: The Expeditions of Benjamin Leigh Smith, England's Forgotten Arctic Explorer. Calgary: University of Calgary Press, 2013. Pp. xxix + 269. ISBN 978-1-55238-705-4. US$41.95. [REVIEW]Peder Roberts - 2015 - British Journal for the History of Science 48 (2):371-372.
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