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Online seminar available

Jim Fleming, “At the Cutting Edge: Harry Wexler and the Emergence of Atmospheric Science,” Community Collaborative Rain, Hail, and Snow Network (CoCoRAHS) online seminar, Fort Collins, CO, Thursday, May 9, 2013.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-MqY0y1rt8&feature=youtu.be

“This presentation tells the story of the emergence of the new interdisciplinary field of atmospheric science in the twentieth century as shaped by the influences of multiple technologies. It does so from the perspective of MIT-trained meteorologist Harry Wexler (1911-1962), an American student of the Bergen School of air mass analysis, head of research in the US Weather Bureau, and one of the most influential meteorologists of the twentieth century, whose career spanned the middle decades of the twentieth century…By telling the story through Wexler’s eyes, a more personal story can be told.”

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New Book: Lake Effect

Syracuse University Press just published Lake Effect: Tales of Warm Lakes, Arctic Winds, and Recurrent Snows, by Mark Monmonier. For more information, please visit http://syracuseuniversitypress.syr.edu/fall-2012/lake-effect.html.

Monmonier is author of Air Apparent, a history of the development and use of weather maps. His new book includes a historical examination of the recognition and understanding of a regionally important meteorological phenomenon.

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New Book: The Third Reich in Antarctica

Cornelia Lüdecke and Colin Summerhayes recently published a new book, The Third Reich in Antarctica: The Story of the Third German Antarctic Expedition 1938-39 (Erskine Press, 2012). For more info, please visit the publisher’s website.

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Origins: May 2012 Issue

Origins: Current Events in Historical Perspective presents its May 2012 issue, featuring:
Climate, Human Population and Human Survival: What the Deep Past Tells Us about the Future

 

The controversies generated by climate science in recent years center around the human relationship with the natural world and with natural resources. This month, historian John Brooke puts that critical question in historical perspective—deep historical perspective. For most of human history, our species had to struggle to survive powerful natural forces, like climate and disease. In the past three centuries, however, things have changed dramatically: that struggle has been reshaped by the unprecedented growth of the human population—from under one billion to now over seven. This issue of Origins forces us to ask whether our population can continue to grow given the current Malthusian pressure on resources and on the earth system itself.

 

Origins is a free, non-commercial publication from the Public History Initiative and eHistory in Ohio State University’s History Department. Origins is found at http://ehistory.osu.edu/osu/origins/.

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Current Anthropology: April Issue

The April issue of Current Anthropology features an interdisciplinary forum addressing the communication of cultural knowledge of environmental change. Titled “Communicating Climate Knowledge: Proxies, Processes, Politics,” the forum is the product of discussion at a Climate Histories conference held at the University of Cambridge in 2011.

 

The forum is available free to all at http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/665033.