Scholar

Poul Holm

H-index: 26
Environmental science 38%
History 21%
poulholm.bsky.social
Researcher, do you know the Frascati Manual? It decides what really counts. And the mindset was fixed fifty years ago. This isn’t a conspiracy. The manual is the spreadsheet that weighs physics and art history, economics, engineering and philosophy open-research-europe.ec.europa.eu/articles/5-2...
poulholm.bsky.social
Calling all Danes+Brits interested in genetics+history: Danish and British biobanks of 858,635 modern individuals reveal migration history from the Middle Ages to the modern day. Major reversal of human geography of west and east Denmark before and after Black Death www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
www.biorxiv.org
poulholm.bsky.social
Calling all Danes+Brits interested in genetics+history: Danish and British biobanks of 858,635 modern individuals reveal migration history from the Middle Ages to the modern day.

Reposted by Poul Holm

profmurdoch.bsky.social
For those interested in British and Irish military, commercial and other forms of migration into Scandinavia and Northern Europe, check out this biographical prosopography. Online and free since 1995.

www.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/ssne

🗃 📚 #17thC #Skystorians #History #Genealogy

Open to updates
The Scotland, Scandinavia and Northern European Biographical Database
www.st-andrews.ac.uk
poulholm.bsky.social
What Can the Public Humanities Learn about Impact from the Environmental Humanities? Open access paper presenting the UNESCO Bridges Consortium and the Oceans Past Initiative @oceanspast.bsky.social @erc4oceans.bsky.social

www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
poulholm.bsky.social
The fish revolution - how humans thrived and the oceans shrank bit.ly/3HHMnSc
The Fish Revolution: how humans thrived and oceans shrank
Fish has long played a vital role in human societies, providing food security and economic growth. But when did fisheries begin to have a significant impact? Once in the late 1500s and again in the late 1700s, fisheries accelerated rapidly and brought food security to European and American societies. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Additional Information ──────────────────────────── https://www.tcd.ie/tceh/projects/ https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/faf.12598 ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Social Media ──────────────────────────── https://twitter.com/TCEHTCD https://twitter.com/4oceanserc https://twitter.com/ERC_Research https://www.twitter.com/PoulHolm https://www.twitter.com/tcddublin https://www.twitter.com/patrick_hayes2 https://www.instagram.com/@MarineInst https://www.instagram.com/@4oceanserc https://www.instagram.com/@marineinstituteireland ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Science Animated ──────────────────────────── http://www.sciani.com/ https://twitter.com/Sci_Ani https://www.facebook.com/scianimation/ https://sciani.com/terms-conditions/ ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ #oceans #humanities4theocean #fishrevolution ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
bit.ly
oldscotbooks.bsky.social
Very much enjoying @davidwilsonhist.bsky.social's talk Inexhaustible Seas: Fisheries Management in Scotland and the British Empire. Especially pleased to see an illustration of a Dutch haringbuis (herring-bus), which I've read about but never seen. #MaritimeHistory #Fishing #Scotland

Reposted by Poul Holm

thekentacorn.bsky.social
This is our southern boundary. Yes, it’s a ditch, but it was dug ONE THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED years ago.

It marks the historic border between the Kingdom of Kent and the South Saxons (or Sussex as they like to call themselves now). It is still the border to this day.
poulholm.bsky.social
My new paper Explaining major shifts in early-modern economies: the causes for the decline of the North Sea Fisheries of Southwest Denmark, 1537–1650 @eseh.bsky.social @openaccessarch.bsky.social www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
poulholm.bsky.social
Historical plankton index - a 1200-year North Sea history uncovered journals.sagepub.com/doi/epub/10.11… Historical Plankton Index estimates zooplankton abundance in the North Sea back to 800 CE

Reposted by Poul Holm

farsouthhistory.bsky.social
Check out Patrick Hayes's review of Elisabeth Townsend's "Cod: A Global History," published in 2022 by @reaktionbooks.bsky.social @uchicagopress.bsky.social; review now available on H-Net #envhist #envhum #foodstudies #oceanhist #maritime 🐟
www.h-net.org/reviews/show...
www.h-net.org

Reposted by Poul Holm

fynnholm.bsky.social
It is a great honor that my book „The Gods of the Sea: Whales and Coastal Communities in Northeast Japan, c.1600–2019“ has won the North American Society for Oceanic History (NASOH) John R. Lyman Book Award in the Maritime and Naval Science, Technology, and Environment category.

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Fields & subjects

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