Results 251 to 260 of about 230,207 (377)

Mining an Anthropocene in Japan: On the making and work of geological imaginaries

open access: yesTransactions of the Institute of British Geographers, EarlyView.
Short Abstract This article addresses how the lithic and the drift might be reworked as an Anthropocene material outside of a chronostratigraphy. Revisiting the finding of a floating fern fossil at the Hashima mine, we delve into a complex array of Geological imaginaries, and undertake our own speculative work.
Deborah P. Dixon   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Leveraged Vaccination to Alleviate Original Antigenic Sin for Enhancing Broad-Neutralizing Antibody Response against SARS-CoV-2 Omicron Subvariants. [PDF]

open access: yesMedComm (2020)
Zhang G   +15 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Postimperial melancholia and the English North–South divide: Reading the life stories of Northern women of colour in London

open access: yesTransactions of the Institute of British Geographers, EarlyView.
Short Abstract The trope of the English North–South divide has come to frame a plethora of national crises in recent years, with the supposedly white working‐class North understood as having been ‘left behind’ by London's ‘metropolitan elite’. I theorise the contemporary English North–South divide as a form of ‘splitting’, a psycho‐spatial strategy ...
Saskia Papadakis
wiley   +1 more source

SARS-CoV-2 serotyping based on spike antigenicity and its implications for host immune evasion. [PDF]

open access: yesEBioMedicine
Ruan W   +13 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Multispecies slavery–environment nexus in resource extraction and animals' ecological politics: Coercive donkey labour in Indian river sand mining

open access: yesTransactions of the Institute of British Geographers, EarlyView.
Short Abstract Coercive animal labour is often state sanctioned as an ecologically friendly mode of sand mining, based on anthropocentric environmental ideology that sees animal bodies as solutions or fixes for often human‐caused environmental crises, even as, incrementally, it causes extreme ecological destruction.
Yamini Narayanan
wiley   +1 more source

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