Description:
    William Fitzhugh Climate Impacts in the Circumpolar Region: An Archaeological Perspective on the Present
The history of northern regions gives pause to those thinking we live in a complacent world. For decades we became used to a world in which episodic disturbances like hurricanes, volcanic eruptions, and floods were the only environmental events of note. Long-term change seemed to be a story for the history books, not our lives.
Today that complacency has been shaken in a way we could not have imagined just two decades ago. Changes in the Arctic have led the charge, and its role as the harbinger of global climate change is now widely acknowledged.
This presentation shows how archaeology could have predicted the events we now find changing our world. A review of some of the cultural and environmental shifts in the North may provide clues about where we are headed in the future, and what can be done about it.
Lectures are free and open to the public.
Lecture Abstract:
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