As industrial processes leave much of the planet in ruins, novel encounters are emerging. To study weedy succession in a former brown coal mining area in Denmark, as part of the Aarhus University Research on the Anthropocene (AURA) project, the authors undertake field observations over time and propose renewed attention to natural history. In this paper, the authors follow mycorrhizal fungi and trees as a conjuncture of natural and social histories that enable their colonization of mining spoils. Three procedures are described: first, a combination of local accounts and field observations of human and nonhuman engagements; second, a process of attunement to the forms through which fungi and trees coordinate underground; and third, collaboration with a molecular biologist to verify field-derived species identities for future analysis. The paper aims to show how natural history might expand studies of interspecies interactions that shape succession in anthropogenic landscapes. Author's Note: Please see the online supplement entitled “Mushrooms and Mycorrhiza: Paxillus, Pisolithus, and Pines: What can DNA tell us?” for more detailed information.
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1 March 2018
Using Natural History in the Study of Industrial Ruins
Elaine Gan,
Anna Tsing,
Daniel Sullivan
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Journal of Ethnobiology
Vol. 38 • No. 1
March 2018
Vol. 38 • No. 1
March 2018
industrial ruins
more-than-human sociality
natural history
unintentional human ecologies
weedy succession