The unwieldy title, Anthropecene, refers to the current geologic age humans occupy, the era of man’s influence on climate. This rapturously beautiful and sometimes alarming film takes to several sites in which climate change is changing the face of the planet.
After the film, Dr. Jay Banner, Professor of Geoscience and Director of the Environmental Science institute, and Dr. Heather Houser, Professor of English with a focus on environmental literature, for a discussion on climate change in the current time and how it is portrayed through the lens of the media.
The unwieldy title, Anthropecene, refers to the current geologic age humans occupy, the era of man’s influence on climate. This rapturously beautiful and sometimes alarming film takes to several sites in which climate change is changing the face of the planet.
After the film, Dr. Jay Banner, Professor of Geoscience and Director of the Environmental Science institute, and Dr. Heather Houser, Professor of English with a focus on environmental literature, for a discussion on climate change in the current time and how it is portrayed through the lens of the media.
The unwieldy title, Anthropecene, refers to the current geologic age humans occupy, the era of man’s influence on climate. This rapturously beautiful and sometimes alarming film takes to several sites in which climate change is changing the face of the planet.
After the film, Dr. Jay Banner, Professor of Geoscience and Director of the Environmental Science institute, and Dr. Heather Houser, Professor of English with a focus on environmental literature, for a discussion on climate change in the current time and how it is portrayed through the lens of the media.