Imperial Climatographies from Tyrol to Turkestan

This article argues for the importance of Europe’s continental empires, Habsburg and Romanov, to the emergence of a physical-dynamical model of the global climate before World War I. It begins to identify a set of questions and methods that were distinctive of climatology as a continental-imperial s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Osiris (Bruges) 2011, Vol.26 (1), p.45-65
1. Verfasser: Coen, Deborah R.
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description This article argues for the importance of Europe’s continental empires, Habsburg and Romanov, to the emergence of a physical-dynamical model of the global climate before World War I. It begins to identify a set of questions and methods that were distinctive of climatology as a continental-imperial science of “regionalization” with a global vision. The focus is on studies of mountain climatology by Heinrich von Ficker and A. I. Voeikov in the ecologically vulnerable regions of Tyrol and western Turkestan. This continental-imperial context deserves historians’ attention because it suggests a new model for the globalization of knowledge: not simply a matter of scaling up, globalization must be understood as a process of seeing across scales, of recognizing causal connections between local, regional, and planetary phenomena.
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subjects Austria-Hungary
Climate
Climate change
Climate models
Climatic zones
Climatology
Cold spells
Geography
Global climate models
History of medicine and histology
History, 18th Century
History, 19th Century
History, 20th Century
Meteorology
Meteorology - history
Mountains
Research - history
Russia (Pre-1917)
Steppes
title Imperial Climatographies from Tyrol to Turkestan
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