Southwest Land, Culture, and Society
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Welcome to the Southwest Land, Culture, and Society Program website!

The Southwest Land, Culture, and Society (SWLCS) program focuses on the interrelationships between the environment, culture, and society of the southwest United States and northwest Mexico. This site offers information about the SWLCS educational programs and about our current projects.

 

News and Announcements:

The 2008 Distinguished Lecture

"Welcome to the Anthropocene" ...  an illustrated talk by William deBuys, award-winning author and conservationist, College of Santa Fe

Anthropocene refers to the most recent period in the Earth's history, beginning in the late 18th century, when human activity first began to have an impact on global climate and ecosystems. The landscapes of the Southwest, for example, while seemingly timeless and unaffected, have experienced enormous changes over the past century. These human-induced changes are becoming harder to predict, harder to live with, and for many, harder to accept. Left unchecked, a warming and increasingly variable climate promises to usher in a period of unprecedented impact.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008
7:00 PM in CESL Auditorium 103
Post-lecture reception at Arizona State Museum
(520)626-8381 | www.statemuseum.arizona.edu

The 2008 Distinguished Lecture Series is co-sponsored by Arizona State Museum, the UA Department of Anthropology, Arid Lands Resource Sciences, and the Laboratory of Tree-ring Research.


New SWLCS Resources: In addition to the SIG (Southwest Information Gateway), which provides centralized access to the many Southwestern information resources on the Web, the SWLCS interactive map server has recently been redesigned and now functions as a series of fully interactive map viewers.

Let us know what you think! Please peruse both resources and send any comments or suggestions to phil@email.arizona.edu.

 


Maps of the Southwest United States
Maps of the Southwest

Southwest Information Gateway