Marginal Nature and Urban Wastelands

Marginal nature is found in urban wastelands such as neglected creeks, wastewater treatment ponds, vacant lots, road and rail waysides, brownfields, fencerows, dumps, and alleyways. What emerges in this wastespace is the unintended product of human activity and nature's unflagging expressiveness, which I call Marginal Nature.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

The one-armed blogger at the gates of dawn


Posted by kevin m anderson at 8:19 AM
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Labels: Join me at noon in the Dougherty Arts Center downtown for the March Lunchtime Lecture - Urban Nature: the American City and Degraded Nature

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kevin m anderson
Austin, Texas, United States
Kevin M. Anderson is a geographer and philosopher who is the coordinator of the AWU - Center for Environmental Research. Kevin has studied at Allegheny College in Pennsylvania [BA], Durham University, England, Ohio University [MA] where he taught philosophy and symbolic logic for several years. He received his Ph.D. in Geography from the University of Texas at Austin with a dissertation entitled: Marginal Nature: Urban Wastelands and the Geography of Nature. His environmental career began on a Pennsylvania farm raising chickens, pigs, and purebred Black Angus cattle, and it has since ranged from running an organic farm in Potomac, Maryland to starting a river conservation foundation in Northeastern Hungary as a Peace Corps Volunteer. He is a co-founder and president of the Texas Riparian Association.
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  • Nights at the Bend - Nightshift at the sewage farm
  • Hornsby Bend Bird Observatory
  • The Austin Water - Center for Environmental Research
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  • Matthew Gandy urban geography and nature
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