Historical sites in Antarctica and Svalbard contain the material remains of past activities of exploration and exploitation of these regions. These sites have been subject to transformation by cultural and non-cultural (natural) processes since their abandonment to the present. For research and management purposes it is important to monitor and explain these changes. This article focuses on the transformation of historic features in Antarctica and Svalbard as assessed through repeat photography. Seven historical features were selected representing a range of site types and past and present site functions. Data collection was based on the opportunistic reproduction of photographs of historic features taken up to 20+ years previously. Data an...
The idea of heritage in Antarctica stereotypically evokes images of disintegrating huts buried under...
High geomorphic and climatic variability in Arctic coastlines makes evaluating future coastal erosio...
Currently, the greatest threat to Antarctic heritage sites comes not from climate change but from th...
Historical sites in Antarctica and Svalbard contain the material remains of past activities of explo...
Historical sites in Antarctica and Svalbard contain the material remains of past activities of explo...
Cultural environments are not static and unchanging, they are subject to a number of site transfor-m...
Svalbard’s cultural heritage sites are important remnants of an international history in the H...
The Arctic is commonly perceived as a pristine wilderness, yet more than four centuries of human ind...
Although archaeological studies focusing on 19th-century sealing have been performed over the past 3...
In 1901, Otto Nordenskjöld led the first Swedish South Polar expedition with a multidisciplinary tea...
In 1901, Otto Nordenskjöld led the first Swedish South Polar expedition with a multidisciplinary tea...
This paper explores the use of narratives in the transformation of historic sites in ...
The idea of heritage in Antarctica stereotypically evokes images of disintegrating huts buried under...
This paper explores the use of narratives in the transformation of historic sites in the polar regio...
The idea of heritage in Antarctica stereotypically evokes images of disintegrating huts buried under...
The idea of heritage in Antarctica stereotypically evokes images of disintegrating huts buried under...
High geomorphic and climatic variability in Arctic coastlines makes evaluating future coastal erosio...
Currently, the greatest threat to Antarctic heritage sites comes not from climate change but from th...
Historical sites in Antarctica and Svalbard contain the material remains of past activities of explo...
Historical sites in Antarctica and Svalbard contain the material remains of past activities of explo...
Cultural environments are not static and unchanging, they are subject to a number of site transfor-m...
Svalbard’s cultural heritage sites are important remnants of an international history in the H...
The Arctic is commonly perceived as a pristine wilderness, yet more than four centuries of human ind...
Although archaeological studies focusing on 19th-century sealing have been performed over the past 3...
In 1901, Otto Nordenskjöld led the first Swedish South Polar expedition with a multidisciplinary tea...
In 1901, Otto Nordenskjöld led the first Swedish South Polar expedition with a multidisciplinary tea...
This paper explores the use of narratives in the transformation of historic sites in ...
The idea of heritage in Antarctica stereotypically evokes images of disintegrating huts buried under...
This paper explores the use of narratives in the transformation of historic sites in the polar regio...
The idea of heritage in Antarctica stereotypically evokes images of disintegrating huts buried under...
The idea of heritage in Antarctica stereotypically evokes images of disintegrating huts buried under...
High geomorphic and climatic variability in Arctic coastlines makes evaluating future coastal erosio...
Currently, the greatest threat to Antarctic heritage sites comes not from climate change but from th...