Synopsis
These online audio resources consist of lectures, seminars and interviews from the School of Geography and the Environment at the University of Oxford.
Episodes
-
Long-period temperature records in the British Isles
20/05/2015 Duration: 24minProf Chris Folland, University of East Anglia and Met Office Hadley Centre, gives a talk as part of the Met Office award for 200 years of continuous weather observations at Oxford ceremony on 15th May 2015.
-
Long-period precipitation records in the British Isles
20/05/2015 Duration: 32minProf Tim Burt, University of Durham, gives a talk as part of the Met Office award for 200 years of continuous weather observations at Oxford ceremony on 15th May 2015 Oxford University's Radcliffe Meteorological Station is the longest running continuous weather station in the UK. On 15 May, the Met Office presented an award to the University 'in recognition of 200 years of continuous climate observations at the Radcliffe Observatory, Oxford'.
-
Are we bigger than the biosphere? An ecologist's examination of our human dominated planet.
24/03/2015 Duration: 54minProf Yadvinder Malhi delivers the 2nd School of Geography and the Environment Annual Lecture at the Royal Geographical Society on 12 February 2015. "We live in a new epoch, the Anthropocene, the Age of Us. The defining feature of this age is that sum of human activity (how many we are and what we are doing) has become large compared to the natural processes of the biosphere. How can we measure how "large" we are, and how has our impact on the planet varied throughout human history? I examine this question through the concept of social metabolism, how much energy we use to support our lifestyles, compared to the metabolism of the biosphere. With this concept in hand, we will travel from a world full of hunter gatherers after the end of the last Ice Age, through the dawn of farming, the Roman Empire, the industrial revolution and finally look at prospects for the 21st century. On the way we'll examine whether our cities behave like termite colonies, and whether people walk faster in London than in Oxford. And y
-
Water Lives: forging a science-policy interface
31/03/2014 Duration: 26minExploring the interface between science and policy-making at Water Lives - a science-policy symposium for Freshwater life in Brussels, January 2014. Listen to find out what every scientist should know about policy-making. Presented by Helen Scales. Produced by Paul Jepson. Supported by Biofresh. This project has received funding from the European Union’s Seventh Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement No 226874.
-
Geography, Inequality and Oxford
17/02/2014 Duration: 53minDanny Dorling delivers his inaugural lecture as Halford Mackinder Professor of Geography on 'Geography, Inequality and Oxford'. Danny Dorling's talk outlines how geography is increasingly important for revealing inequalities - over the last third of a century, inequalities in health and wealth have been rising and rising fastest in the last 5 years. The last period in recent history when we enjoyed relative equality was back in the 1970s - the time when Danny himself was living and schooled in Oxford.
-
Environmental Decision-Making in the European Union: Who Exercises Power?
15/05/2013 Duration: 39minAs part of Europe Day on 9 May 2013, the Conservation Governance Laboratory at the University of Oxford organised a panel discussion co-sponsored by the School of Geography and the Environment and the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment.
-
The People's Planet: Reconnecting climate science, climate policy and reality
07/02/2012 Duration: 53minMyles Allen (Professor of Geosystem Science, School of Geography and the Environment and Department of Physics) delivers his inaugural lecture on 28 Nov 2011.
-
A President, the Gobi and the Oxford Union: Environment, Politics and Mining in Mongolia.
22/11/2011 Duration: 01h09minThree researchers analyse the Mongolian President's speech at the Oxford Union, October 2011. Drawing from their current research, the themes of environment, politics and mining influence in Mongolia are discussed and implications for the future assessed.
-
Soil moisture and feedback cycles; southern Africa as a carbon sink
24/02/2011 Duration: 17minAndrew Thomas, Manchester Metropolitan University, talks at the 1st Oxford Interdisciplinary Desert Conference hosted by the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, on the 15-16 April 2010.
-
Minimum carbon payment along an aridity gradient for dryland forestation
24/02/2011 Duration: 16minHenri Rueff, Centre for Development and Environment, University of Bern, talks at the 1st Oxford Interdisciplinary Desert Conference hosted by the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, on the 15-16 April 2010.
-
Casting new light on Late Quaternary environmental and palaeohydrological change in the Namib desert: a review of the application of optically stimulated luminescence
24/02/2011 Duration: 12minAbi Stone, School of Geography and the Environment, Oxford, talks at the 1st Oxford Interdisciplinary Desert Conference hosted by the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, on the 15-16 April 2010.
-
Modelling the emission and transport of Saharan dust
24/02/2011 Duration: 12minJamie Banks, Atmospheric Physics, Oxford, talks at the 1st Oxford Interdisciplinary Desert Conference hosted by the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, on the 15-16 April 2010.
-
Aeolian research
24/02/2011 Duration: 16minMarcelo Zarate, Universidad Nacional de La Pampa, Soanta Rosa, Argentina, talks at the 1st Oxford Interdisciplinary Desert Conference hosted by the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, on the 15-16 April 2010.
-
Water landscapes in central Sahara
24/02/2011 Duration: 16minSavino di Lernia, University of Rome, talks at the 1st Oxford Interdisciplinary Desert Conference hosted by the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, on the 15-16 April 2010.
-
Gateway of India: the implications of palaeoenvironmental change in the Thar desert, NW India, for the dispersal of Homo Sapiens
24/02/2011 Duration: 16minJames Blinkhorn, School of Archaeology, Oxford, talks at the 1st Oxford Interdisciplinary Desert Conference hosted by the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, on the 15-16 April 2010.
-
A new estimate about the evaporation in the deserts of northwestern China
24/02/2011 Duration: 20minXiaoping Yang, Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, talks at the 1st Oxford Interdisciplinary Desert Conference hosted by the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, on the 15-16 April 2010.
-
Wet rocks, big trouble? Using novel techniques to assess rock art deterioration
24/02/2011 Duration: 14minLisa Mol, School of Geography and the Environment, Oxford, talks at the 1st Oxford Interdisciplinary Desert Conference hosted by the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, on the 15-16 April 2010.
-
The role of the desert in forming the ancient Egyptian civilisation
24/02/2011 Duration: 16minMohamed Abouelata, King Saud University, Saudi Arabia, talks at the 1st Oxford Interdisciplinary Desert Conference hosted by the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, on the 15-16 April 2010.
-
Hominid dispersals and the Middle Palaeolithic of Arabia
24/02/2011 Duration: 18minHuw Groucutt, School of Archaeology, Oxford, talks at the 1st Oxford Interdisciplinary Desert Conference hosted by the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, on the 15-16 April 2010.
-
From Dick to the Desert: a short (and incomplete) history of Oxford geography's contributions to desert science
24/02/2011 Duration: 34minProf. David Thomas, School of Geography and the Environment, Oxford, delivers the keynote address at the 1st Oxford Interdisciplinary Desert Conference hosted by the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, on the 15-16 April 2010.