Results 261 to 270 of about 1,537,798 (335)
Challenging neoliberal time: Creating space for radical praxis in geography
Short Abstract The non‐linearity of time is a useful way to understand how we work in academia. In this paper I explore how can we change how we use our time. I propose three responses, which each play with time as non‐linear, multiple rhythms, and as having a lack of balance or stability.
Jenny Pickerill
wiley +1 more source
Untangling nutrient co‐regulation of ombrotrophic peatland development
Multi‐method (FTIR, FT‐NIR and TGA) approaches characterizing the organic peat constituents at Holcroft Moss reveal a record of switches that reflect broadly hydroclimate variability governing the decomposition patterns. There are periods, however, where hydroclimate does not fully explain the variability observed and instead changes appear linked to ...
Richard C. Chiverrell +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Palaeoenvironmental records along the eastern coast of Thailand remain sparse, with only a few studies attempting to reconstruct past climatic and environmental conditions. However, additional palaeoenvironmental, palaeoclimatic and sea‐level records are needed to improve our understanding of coastal evolution and local environmental changes.
Sakonvan Chawchai +7 more
wiley +1 more source
The interaction between glaciers and the debris accumulating on their surfaces is critical as the Earth warms, with consequences for ice dynamics, hydrology and mass balance together with slope and sedimentary processes. Understanding this interaction is necessary since it influences ablation rates, sediment and meltwater pathways.
Paulina Mejías Osorio +5 more
wiley +1 more source
How do visual and conceptual factors predict the composition of typical scene drawings?
Wang G +6 more
europepmc +1 more source
This paper explores the multifaceted geographies of climate migration and resilience stemming from the rapid degradation of the global cryosphere, with a particular focus on the contrasting scales of Antarctica and the Pacific Atolls. It investigates how melting glaciers, ice sheets, and sea-level rise are directly displacing communities, altering ...
Revista, Zen, GEOGRAPHY, 10
+4 more sources
A geography of moral hazard: Sources and sinks of motor-vehicle commuting externalities
Motor-vehicles are responsible for harms to health that are not directly experienced by individual drivers - such as air pollution and risk of injury to pedestrians. In addition to their direct effects on health, these harms also represent a moral hazard since drivers are not required to consider their effects as part of their decision to drive.
Niko, Yiannakoulias +2 more
openaire +3 more sources
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THE TERRITORIAL ILLUSION AND BEHAVIOURAL SINK: CRITICAL NOTES ON BEHAVIOURAL GEOGRAPHY
Antipode, 1973Richard Rieser
openaire +2 more sources
Rural outmigration generates a carbon sink in South China karst
Progress in Physical Geography: Earth and Environment, 2023China karst is a global hotspot of increasing vegetation cover, with ecological conservation projects being considered as the main driver. New research using global datasets also indicates that rural outmigration has contributed to increasing biomass at ...
Jingyi Chang +7 more
semanticscholar +1 more source

