
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
"Rivers of Power"was published in 2020. It covers humans' history with rivers from some of the earliest civilizations to the most powerful nations today and how water is possibly the greatest natural capital.
Rivers, their water and their usefulness for society has not changed. What is changing is how humans can and do move that water from source to a place of use. This episode explores great canals that are under construction, massive dams that are creating international tensions, efforts to use water over and over and over.
Our human relationship with rivers is ongoing and morphing and simultaneously static. Dr. Smith seems to know this and is able to explain this through cultures and time.
Dr. Laurence C. Smith was a professor at UCLA for 20 years in the Geography Department and now teaches at Brown University. He also conducts research in the northern arctic learning about rivers that form from the ice melt of glaciers.
Videos and links of Dr. Smiths arctic work and research:
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2021/what-a-glacial-river-reveals-about-the-greenland-ice-sheet
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/10/27/world/greenland-is-melting-away.html
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/12/05/climate/greenland-ice-melting.html?mtrref=duckduckgo.com&gwh=55A49A12C52C7A3814A02AA9C525DD28&gwt=regi&assetType=REGIWALL
The River Radius Podcast
Website
Email
Instagram
Facebook
THE RIVER RADIUS
Website
Runoff signup (episode newsletter)
Apple Podcast
Spotify
Link Tree
4.9
103103 ratings
"Rivers of Power"was published in 2020. It covers humans' history with rivers from some of the earliest civilizations to the most powerful nations today and how water is possibly the greatest natural capital.
Rivers, their water and their usefulness for society has not changed. What is changing is how humans can and do move that water from source to a place of use. This episode explores great canals that are under construction, massive dams that are creating international tensions, efforts to use water over and over and over.
Our human relationship with rivers is ongoing and morphing and simultaneously static. Dr. Smith seems to know this and is able to explain this through cultures and time.
Dr. Laurence C. Smith was a professor at UCLA for 20 years in the Geography Department and now teaches at Brown University. He also conducts research in the northern arctic learning about rivers that form from the ice melt of glaciers.
Videos and links of Dr. Smiths arctic work and research:
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2021/what-a-glacial-river-reveals-about-the-greenland-ice-sheet
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/10/27/world/greenland-is-melting-away.html
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/12/05/climate/greenland-ice-melting.html?mtrref=duckduckgo.com&gwh=55A49A12C52C7A3814A02AA9C525DD28&gwt=regi&assetType=REGIWALL
The River Radius Podcast
Website
Email
Instagram
Facebook
THE RIVER RADIUS
Website
Runoff signup (episode newsletter)
Apple Podcast
Spotify
Link Tree
38,597 Listeners
43,808 Listeners
90,794 Listeners
38,097 Listeners
2,575 Listeners
43,230 Listeners
1,440 Listeners
1,036 Listeners
2,112 Listeners
1,260 Listeners
86,354 Listeners
185 Listeners
15,873 Listeners
237 Listeners
5,009 Listeners