This is the 266th post in my series that explores the most-used words in the top stories shared among Environmental Historians and Environmental Humanities scholars on Twitter each week.
Here are the top articles among environmental historians and humanities scholars this past week (April 4, 2022 – April 10, 2022):
Monday: “Comparative Analysis of the Vocal Repertoires of the Indri (Indri indri) and the Diademed Sifaka (Propithecus diadema)” by Daria Valente, et.al., International Journal of Primatology
Tuesday: “Thinking with Deborah Bird Rose” by Thom van Dooren, Oslo School of Environmental Humanities (OSEH)
Wednesday: “Lessons Learned: Looking Back to Go Forward,” Collaborative on Health and the Environment
Thursday: “Approaches to Climate Change in Environmental Humanities” by Kjersti Fløttum, et.al., Department of Archaeology, History, Cultural Studies and Religion, University of Bergen
Friday: “Climate scientists are desperate: we’re crying, begging and getting arrested” by Peter Kalmus, The Guardian
Saturday: “Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow,” William & Mary
Sunday: “COVID vaccine program prevented millions of US deaths, study finds” by Arielle Mitropoulos, ABC News
Top Words
- Scholar
- Article
- call
- species
- vocal
- calls
- PubMed
- repertoire
- diadema
- will
