9 research outputs found

    Politics, geological past, and the future of earth

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    From the 1940s, new technologies, like carbon dating, ice- and sea-core drilling, and pollen analysis not only vastly expanded time horizons in geophysical and climatological research, but also pinpointed past events on a newly historical timescale. Using natural proxy indicators, these studies brought to light a series of globally disruptive events in geological time, for example, volcanic eruptions of previously unknown scale and types that had also an impact on the Earth’s climate. The past became discrete. Knowing more about the past also meant knowing more about possible futures, given that some catastrophic events have occurred repeatedly or have become increasingly predictable with the help of computer modeling. This meant that scientists' claims about the future of the earth increasingly came to interfere with politics and with traditional economic planning. The paper argues that the “new” past has come to weigh in two ways on the present and the future. First, it dwarfed the human time scale, thus in-creasing the challenge of dealing with heterogeneous time scales. Second, prehis-toric past events came to take on political significance. The deep past became part of political history, and thus of politics

    Herault flood record

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    Herault flood record over the past two millennia from magnetic susceptibility data (200 BCE to 1800 CE) and documentary sources (1800-2000 CE

    Herault flood record

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    Herault flood record over the past two millennia from magnetic susceptibility data (200 BCE to 1800 CE) and documentary sources (1800-2000 CE)THIS DATASET IS ARCHIVED AT DANS/EASY, BUT NOT ACCESSIBLE HERE. TO VIEW A LIST OF FILES AND ACCESS THE FILES IN THIS DATASET CLICK ON THE DOI-LINK ABOV

    A new method to measure late Holocene delta evolution and sediment flux in incised-valley systems: application to the coastal plain of the Argens River in the western Mediterranean

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    geochemical and magnetic susceptibility data of deltaic sequences from the coastal plain of the Argens River in the western Mediterranea
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