Environmental History: Gondwana to Global Warming
Undergraduate
LTU-HIS3AEH 2025Course information for 2025 intake View information for 2024 course intake
- Study method
- 100% online
- Assessments
- 100% online
- Enrol by
- 20 July 2025
- Entry requirements
- Prior study needed
- Duration
- 12 weeks
- Price from
- $1,164
- Upfront cost
- $0
- Loan available
- HECS-HELP and FEE-HELP available
Environmental History: Gondwana to Global Warming
About this subject
On successful completion you will be able to:
- Examine environmental issues in historical contexts by identifying and interpreting primary and secondary sources according to the methodological and ethical conventions of the environmental history discipline.
- Develop an understanding of a variety of conceptual approaches to interpreting past environments and their representation.
- Demonstrate critical understanding of the environmental legacies of at least one period or culture of the past.
- Collaborate to construct an evidence-based argument or narrative in audio, digital, oral, visual or written form.
- What is Environmental History?
- The Extinction of Ancient Fauna
- First Nations Custodianship
- The Impact of Pastoralism and Mining
- Acclimatisation
- ‘Pest’ Species
- Fire, Flood, and Drought
- Environmental Activism
- The Anthropocene
Ancient Gondwana evolved over forty millennia into several continents including Australia. Since European settlement, the human impact on land, massive species extinction, and climate change, pose threats to the continent's fragile ecology. You will consider Australia's early geological history; Indigenous land use; competing ideas of land use among early settlers; and how various forms of land use shaped, and changed the environment. We also explore how Australian environments shaped humans. You will examine settlement as an artefact of colonialism and Empire, and how environmental thinking impacted on Australia and shaped its participation in global environmental movements. You will research environmental history in local and global contexts. This is a level 3 subject. Please consider the subject pre-requisites before enrolling. This subject is fully online but includes live sessions with optional student attendance and participation.
- Contribution to group report (1000 words equivalent) (25%)
- One 2000 word research essay (50%)
- One 1000 word reflective essay (25%)
For textbook details check your university's handbook, website or learning management system (LMS).
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- QS Ranking 2024:
- 17
- Times Higher Education Ranking 2024:
- 18
Entry requirements
Others
Prerequisites: Students must have completed 30 credit points of Level one subjects.
Additional requirements
No additional requirements
Study load
- 0.125 EFTSL
- This is in the range of 10 to 12 hours of study each week.
Equivalent full time study load (EFTSL) is one way to calculate your study load. One (1.0) EFTSL is equivalent to a full-time study load for one year.
Find out more information on Commonwealth Loans to understand what this means to your eligibility for financial support.
What to study next?
Once you’ve completed this subject it can be credited towards one of the following courses
Bachelor of Arts/Bachelor of Health Sciences
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