Patrick Anthony
HISTORIES OF SCIENCE, ENVIRONMENT, AND POWER IN EURASIA & THE WORLD
About me
Trained in Montana and Tennessee (PhD 2021, Vanderbilt University), I am a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow at Uppsala University. My current work explores nineteenth-century sciences of astronomy, climate, and geophysics at the edges of Russia’s colonial empire, juxtaposed against the Islamic sciences and nomadic geographies of central Eurasia.
My book Unearthed: Science and Environment across Mineral Frontiers is forthcoming with the University of Chicago Press (Spring 2026). Unearthed tells the story of earth and atmospheric sciences assembled across mineral frontiers of the Americas and Eurasia and demarcates a critical juncture in the long durée of anthropogenic climate change.
PDFs of my publications are available below.
Publications
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Unearthed: Science and Environment Across Mineral Frontiers is forthcoming in the History of Science series with University of Chicago Press (Spring 2026).
Unearthed is the story of how early environmental sciences laid the groundwork for global extractivism in the nineteenth century. Following the itineraries of Alexander von Humboldt, from the heart of Europe’s ore mining industry across empires east and west, it shows how sciences of the “Humboldtian” brand became formidable agents in the making of global asymmetries that still characterize our climate-changed world. Unearthed also ranges along the vertical axis, from ore veins to isotherms, opening a connected history of sciences practiced variously by Mexican cartographers and Siberian surveyors and based in systems of captive or coerced labor. At its core, Unearthed shows how sciences assembled across world mineral frontiers merely measure or represent nature but enacted new social and ecological realities on the ground, as above and below it. Rooted in the fiscal-military states of Germany, combined study of earth and air—or geo-atmospherics—became a key resource for aggressive European and settler states from the trans-Mississippi west to the trans-Caspian east. Scaling from Prussia to the World and back again, the circuits of German miners and physicists show how central Europe, seemingly removed from colonial empire, was rather central to it. By turns, those agents documented highly disturbed ecologies and directed their exploitation. Unearthed therefore pursues history as reportage, accounting for an age of intensified extractivism and territorialization, an age whose legacy is still up in the air.
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Nature’s keepers: Working families and the economy of earthly objects. History of Science, special issue “Making science of things,” eds. Brooke Penaloza-Patzak and Tamara Fernando (June 11, 2025): https://doi.org/10.1177/007327532513303
A Global History of Global Physics, accepted and forthcoming in Filozofski vestnik, special issue on new approaches in the history of science, ed. Svit Komel (2025).
Julie von Bechtolsheim, A Political Life: Women’s Work and Governance in the Age of Revolution. Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies 46, no. 4 (2023): 475-498.
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Events
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“ReOrient: Active archives and (counter)colonial spaces” (May 2025)
International conference at Uppsala University, sponsored by the European Commission and the Riksbankens Jubileumsfond Initiation Grant. Organized with Cristian M. Torres Gutiérrez and Hirra Ateeq.
“Measuring Eurasia: A Conference on Survey Sciences at the Edges of Empire” (June 2024)
International conference at University College Dublin, sponsored the UCD Humanities Institute, College of Arts and Humanities, and Earth Institute
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"Earth science as inner colonization: Prussia’s arts of world governance.” Talk sponsored by the conference on “The Geological Imagination in the Long Nineteenth Century” at the Huntington Library, San Marino, California, April 2025.
“Measuring Eurasia: Empire, Islam, and the Sciences.” Talk at “History Hash Outs” at the Department of History, The American University in Cairo, Egypt, February 2025.
“Toward extractive histories of science.” Talk at the Department of History of Science and Ideas, Uppsala University, Higher Seminar on “New Approaches to the History of Mining,” September 2024.
“Terraforming tableau and the tracing of global capitalism.” Talk sponsored by “Extraction and Aesthetics: Pasts, Currents, Futures.” Jøssingfjord Science Museum and Sandbekk, Rogaland, Norway, September 2024.
“Eurasian transits: The many paths of astro-navigation from the Black Sea to Lake Balkhash,” at the conference “Measuring Eurasia,” UCD Humanities Institute, Dublin, Ireland, June 2024.
“Caucasian beech, Kazakh poplar, and the construction of colonial nature.” Talk sponsored by the University of Cambridge, “Colonial Natures” conference, June 2024.
“Extractive Histories of Environmental Science,” sponsored by the MINERALS Seminar Series and Podcast at the Humanities Institute of University College Dublin, November 2023.
“Mercenary Science between American and Eurasian Empires,” Conference on Spaces in Between and the History of Knowledge, Austrian Academy of Sciences, 5-6 October 2023.
“Terrestrial Enlightenment: Ruin and Revolution in an Eighteenth-Century Climate Crisis,” German Historical Institute London, Bloomsbury Institute. 29 November 2022.
“A Wainwright’s Tale: Placing the Village in the History of Natural History,” Historical Institute, Universität Bern. 16 November 2022.
“Colonizing Earth and Air: Instructing Survey Sciences in Mexico and Siberia.” Conference on Colonial Instructions: Knowledge, Genre and Power, Uppsala University. 11 November 2022.
“Imperial Orography: ‘Liminal Experience’ in Central Asian Borderlands.” Conference Celebrating the Works of Martin Rudwick on his 90th Birthday. 19 April 2022.
“The Upland Exchange: Village Life in Eighteenth-Century Natural History.” Cabinet of Natural History, Cambridge University. 18 October 2021.
“Working and Knowing: A Labor History of ‘Humboldtian Science’ from Prussia to Mexico and Back.” Modern European History Seminar, Cambridge University. 1 June 2021.
“Artisans in the Mountains: Topographies of Science and Work.” Colloquium for Science Studies, ETH Zürich. 28 April 2021.
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Teaching
My teaching interests range across the history of science, environmental history, Eurasian history and the history of global borderlands/frontiers.
In 2021, I was recognized by the College of Arts and Science at Vanderbilt University for excellence in teaching.
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The Collecting and Displaying of Nature: Historical Perspectives (graduate level), Uppsala University.
Global History of Science and Environment, University College Dublin.
Readings in the History of Science, Medicine, and Technology (graduate level), Vanderbilt University.
American Medicine and the World, Vanderbilt University.
History of the Modern Sciences and Society, Vanderbilt University.
Darwinian Revolution: Issues in Contemporary Science, Montana State University.
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Image credit: Nikolai Nikolaevich Karazin, 1891. Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2018693677/