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Professor Bronwen Whitney

Professor

School: Geography and Natural Sciences

My love of palaeoenvironmental science began in the maritimes of Canada which experience high magnitude climate and vegetation change at the end of the last ice age. 

I went on to study for my PhD at the University of Edinburgh (2005 – 2009) where I examined climate and vegetation change from the last glacial period until present in the world’s largest tropical wetland. 

I joined Northumbria in 2015 and I continue to research the interactions between people, plants and environmental change on both sides of the Atlantic.

Bronwen Whitney

Campus Address

Ellison Building A207



I am a palaeoecologist with expertise on the human drivers of ecosystem change in the tropical Americas. My research is widely interdisciplinary, incorporating archaeological and historical perspectives in the investigation of past land use change and the resulting impact on plant communities, biodiversity, and fire regimes. Recent research has uncovered evidence of Pre-Columbian in the seasonal wetlands of the Bolivian Amazon.

I have recently turned my research to reconstructing past landscapes of Northumberland, supported by the Leverhulme-funded project 'Community, Landscape and Social Stratification in early medieval Northumbria'. This project aims to use environmental archives that reflect the activities of the everyday to investigate the economic and social transformations of the post-Roman world.

My research also investigates climate-driven ecosystem change across seasonally dry tropical forests, savannas and wetlands over thousands of years, including tropical peatlands. Recent published studies have highlighted emerging in the world's largest tropical wetland and the first study of a previously undescribed on the Caribbean coast, which has challenged our understanding of tropical peatland ecology and biogeography.

  • Loretta-Ann Jilks Palaeoenvironmental evidence of wetland domestication in the Llanos de Mojos, Bolivian Amazon. Start Date: 01/10/2021 End Date: 17/10/2025
  • Loretta-Ann Jilks Palaeoenvironmental evidence of wetland domestication in the Llanos de Mojos, Bolivian Amazon. Start Date: 01/10/2021 End Date: 21/02/2026
  • Geography PhD June 29 2009
  • Fellow (FHEA) Higher Education Academy (HEA) 2016

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