• Fixing a Nation’s Plumbing I: India’s National River Linking Project

    Fixing a Nation’s Plumbing I: India’s National River Linking Project

    by Vikas Lakhani In 1946, British colonialists launched a grand scheme to cultivate groundnuts in the uninhabitable parts of Tanganyika, a former colony that corresponds to the mainland part of today’s United Republic of Tanzania. Under the leadership of the agronomist John Wakefield, the scheme—named the “Wakefield mission”—was driven by the desperation to overcome the…

    READ MORE

  • The Lager Beer Revolution in the United States

    The Lager Beer Revolution in the United States

    By Jana Weiß In November 2015, a record that had lasted 142 years was broken: for the first time since 1873, the peak number of breweries passed 4,131. Since then, the number of US breweries has continued to reach new heights.

    READ MORE

  • The Last Kindred Spirit of Moths and Butterflies

    The Last Kindred Spirit of Moths and Butterflies

    By Susanne Schmitt and Birgit Müller We are standing in a hallway across from a hidden treasure: the world’s largest collection of butterflies and moths, holding about 13 million specimens. Some parts of the collection date back to the 1760s; some historic sections have been carefully gathered and annotated by the likes of explorer and…

    READ MORE

  • Insect Profile: The Apollo

    Insect Profile: The Apollo

    *Featured image: Specimens of  Parnassius Apollo in a collection case at the Zoologische Staatssammlung München. Photo: Susanne Schmitt. By Susanne Schmitt and Birgit Müller Classified as moderately endangered, Parnassius apollo is a species of butterfly that inhabits mountain meadows and rocky alpine sites. These creatures’ large wings make them visible from afar, even for visually clumsy…

    READ MORE

  • LUNCHTIME COLLOQUIA, SUMMER 2018

    LUNCHTIME COLLOQUIA, SUMMER 2018

    Oceans, tourism development, geopolitics, Anthropocene, and much more during the 2018 summer semester at the Rachel Carson Center. Would you like to keep up to date with our latest Lunchtime Colloquia? Then follow us by subscribing to our Rachel Carson Center Youtube Channel for new (and old) discussions! 12 April 2018: Serenella Iovino on “Reading the Anthropocene…

    READ MORE

  • The Radical Hope Syllabus 2018

    The Radical Hope Syllabus 2018

    This post was originally published by Radical Hope: Inspiring Sustainability Transformations Through our Past | A Group-Sourced Syllabus. It is reposted here with permission. The project is the outcome of a workshop organized by the Rachel Carson Center and the University of Texas, Austin, in 2017. Read the conference report for this event. (Featured image: Distant…

    READ MORE

  • Making Tracks: Jenny Carlson

    Making Tracks: Jenny Carlson

    By Jennifer Carlson My journey to the Rachel Carson Center began in the 1980s on Texas’s blackland prairie, where my family spent weekends on an old farm that my father’s parents owned east of Austin. While my father, mother, and grandfather cared for our cows, fixed fences, or bought supplies in town, my grandmother swept…

    READ MORE

  • Capturing the Environment

    Capturing the Environment

    “Visualizing the Environment: Environmental Photography Workshop” By Sasha L. Gora This very blog is framed around the idea of seeing the woods, but what about photographing the woods? The common expression,“Can’t see the wood (or forest) for the trees,” communicates the sense of not being able to visualize the big picture. One is simply too…

    READ MORE

  • Fifty Years Ago, Cockchafers Belonged to Spring…

    Fifty Years Ago, Cockchafers Belonged to Spring…

    By Birgit Müller and Susanne Schmitt We met Ernst-Gerhard Burmeister at the Bavarian State Collection of Zoology where he has dedicated most of his professional life to the amazing collection of over 25 million zoological specimens, one of the largest natural history collections in the world.

    READ MORE