Prophecy and Prediction: Forecasting Drought and Famine in British India and the Australian Colonies

IF 0.3 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
R. Morgan
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

In British India and the Australian colonies, drought and famine, as well as other hazards, were challenges facing local and metropolitan meteorologists. In this article, I examine the colonial and environmental contexts that animated the studies of both Indian and Australian scientists and the meteorological futures they sought to realise. Colonial scientists in India and Australia were eager to develop means of seasonal weather prediction that could aid the advancement of Empire underway in their respective continents. As this article shows, meteorologists in both places understood that the climate knowledge emerging on each side of the east Indian Ocean could be mutually beneficial in related ways. Their vast continental scales, imperial bonds, geographic orientation and telegraphic connection made them worthy partners in colonial efforts to discern and predict weather patterns, while contributing to the wider field of meteorological science. The threat to colonial security and prosperity that drought and famine posed helped to thicken the bonds between these reaches of the empire, as their meteorologists sought to impose their territorial logic of the skies above.
预言与预测:预测英属印度和澳大利亚殖民地的干旱和饥荒
在英属印度和澳大利亚殖民地,干旱和饥荒以及其他灾害是当地和大都市气象学家面临的挑战。在这篇文章中,我研究了殖民和环境背景,这些背景激发了印度和澳大利亚科学家的研究,以及他们试图实现的气象未来。印度和澳大利亚的殖民地科学家渴望开发季节性天气预报的方法,以帮助帝国在各自大陆上的发展。正如本文所示,两地的气象学家都明白,东印度洋两岸的气候知识在相关方面可能对双方都有利。幅员辽阔的大陆、帝国的纽带、地理定位和电报联系使它们成为殖民地辨别和预测天气模式的重要合作伙伴,同时为更广泛的气象科学领域做出贡献。干旱和饥荒对殖民地的安全和繁荣构成了威胁,这有助于加强帝国这些地区之间的联系,因为他们的气象学家试图将他们对天空的领土逻辑强加于人。
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来源期刊
Global Environment
Global Environment ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
25.00%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: The half-yearly journal Global Environment: A Journal of History and Natural and Social Sciences acts as a forum and echo chamber for ongoing studies on the environment and world history, with special focus on modern and contemporary topics. Our intent is to gather and stimulate scholarship that, despite a diversity of approaches and themes, shares an environmental perspective on world history in its various facets, including economic development, social relations, production government, and international relations. One of the journal’s main commitments is to bring together different areas of expertise in both the natural and the social sciences to facilitate a common language and a common perspective in the study of history. This commitment is fulfilled by way of peer-reviewed research articles and also by interviews and other special features. Global Environment strives to transcend the western-centric and ‘developist’ bias that has dominated international environmental historiography so far and to favour the emergence of spatially and culturally diversified points of view. It seeks to replace the notion of ‘hierarchy’ with those of ‘relationship’ and ‘exchange’ – between continents, states, regions, cities, central zones and peripheral areas – in studying the construction or destruction of environments and ecosystems.
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