
12 November 2021 / 14 h 00 min — 16 h 00 min
Jérôme Gaillardet, Professor of geochemistry of the Earth’s surface processes, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris.
For online (live) attendance: https://live.epog.eu
For the replay: https://videos.epog.eu
The Critical Zone is the thin pellicle of the Earth’s surface that hosts life and societies. This is actually the human’s habitat. Named after a recent scientific initiative coming from Earth scientists, the science of the critical zone aims at reconnecting disciplines of experimental and natural sciences and moving forward a more holistic approach. Critical Zone science is place-based and uses networks of instrumented field sites. The natural objects making the critical zone (soils, rivers, aquifers…) are also political entities offering a new perspective on how to invent a more sustainable relationship of humans with to the planet.
Arènes, A., Latour, B., & Gaillardet, J. (2018). Giving depth to the surface: An exercise in the Gaia-graphy of critical zones. The Anthropocene Review, 5(2), 120–135.
Latour, B., & Weibel, P. (Eds.). (2020). Critical zones: observatories for earthly politics. MIT Press.






