Environmental Digital Humanities Seminar

The Environmental Digital Humanities Seminar (EDHS) brings together scholars from across the humanities who use digital methods to understand environments past, present, and future. EDHS is inclusive of urban, rural, suburban spaces and places and while we explore environments globally, we also showcase local work from and about the North of England.

Organisers: Giulia Grisot (Manchester), Katherine McDonough (Lancaster), Luca Scholz (Manchester), Joanna Taylor (Manchester).

EDHS is supported by the Centre for Digital Humanities, Cultures, and Media at the University of Manchester, the Digital Humanities Centre at Lancaster, the N8, the Lancaster Data Science Institute, CIDRAL, and the MCGIS research group at Manchester.

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15 October 2025, 12-1pm (online). Dr Iason Jongepier (University of Antwerp) and Vincent Ducatteeuw (Ghent University): Artemis - Advanced Research Tools for Environmental Studies for Historical Maps of the Scheldt Valley

This presentation introduces Artemis, a Flemish research project that unlocks and interlinks historical Belgian maps for environmental and landscape research. The focus is on the Scheldt River Valley between Ghent and Antwerp, a region shaped by a long history of human interaction with the river. Artemis processes a selection of pre-1880 maps, including the Ferraris, Vandermaelen and cadastral series, using a combination of computer vision techniques and manual validation.

The extracted data, such as toponyms and land use, will be made available as Linked Open Data through a IIIF-enabled online platform. This creates a reusable infrastructure for researchers and institutions. The second part of the talk highlights one of Artemis’s research scenarios: historical flooding and water management in the Scheldt basin.

Using extracted map data together with sources such as newspapers and official reports, the study reconstructs changes in hydrography and identifies flood-prone areas between the late eighteenth and early twentieth centuries. It focuses on key landscape features including dikes, wetlands and floodplains, and explores how their transformation may have increased vulnerability to flooding. Special attention is given to the 1906 flood and the ways in which local communities perceived and responded to the event.

12 November 2025, 12-1pm (online): Elizabeth Hameeteman (TU Berlin): Reimagining Desalination through Digital Archives

During my Gale-ESEH Non-Residential Fellowship in Digital Environmental History, I explored how digital tools can expand archival research on the history of desalination. Until then, my work relied mostly on traditional archival practices: following paper trails, taking notes by hand, and reconstructing stories from scattered documents. The fellowship invited me to try a different approach.

Using Gale’s collections and the Gale Digital Scholar Lab, I examined how desalination was promoted as a postwar development strategy across colonial and postcolonial contexts. Rather than working within a single archive, I could move across newspapers, government publications, and institutional reports from multiple regions and languages. Tools such as ngram analysis, entity recognition, and topic modeling highlighted recurring terms like “development” and “modernization,” while also drawing my attention to silences — moments when desalination might have been expected but was absent from the record.

The project’s initial scope was intentionally broad, designed to see what themes and connections might emerge: tracing how colonial powers promoted desalination in overseas territories and how newly independent states later adopted it as part of their strategies for sovereignty and growth. At stake were questions about politics and technological choice: why governments invested in desalination, what promises it carried, and how these visions circulated in the postwar world. Yet what proved most transformative was not the data itself but what surfaced between the lines.

Among the documents I encountered — though not directly tied to my original case study — was a 1959 White House memo on a desalination project in Tunisia. I knew the project, but the memo revealed US involvement was deeper that I had thought. It prompted me to reflect on the political logics of desalination in newly independent states and, more significantly, led me to a broader realization: solar desalination — a once-promising but ultimately sidelined technology — remains critically underexplored.

What began broadly became a launching point for a more focused trajectory on this history. This new direction emerged from the fellowship’s space for reflection, highlighting how digital methods can not only reveal new sources but also open pathways to rethink overlooked futures.

27 February 2026 (in person): Fluid Environments & Spatial Humanities Workshop at Lancaster University

More information coming soon.

11 March 2026 3pm (online). Jim Clifford (University of Saskatchewan): Solving Optical Character Recognition(?): Using olmOCR to follow commodities through the British World System

Poor OCR resulting from irregular print, long s characters, and poor quality scans of microfilms has limited the effectiveness of text mining in digital history. Allan AI developed an energy efficient, low cost and open source tool that exceeds the performance of costly multimodal large language models.

We developed a pipeline to download and OCR hundreds of thousands of pages of Internet archive content and we are partnering with Canadiana.org to reprocess their collection. With clean OCR, we are developing named entity recognition pipelines to develop linked open data and build knowledge graphs focused on the development of extractivist commodity economies in the British World System from the 1650s to the 1960s.

This presentation will focus on the technical foundations and discuss early results.

15 April 2026, 12-1pm (online): Michaela Mahlberg (Friedrich-Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremberg): title TBC

More information coming soon.

Past events