Boyle, ElliotCatt, BradenGoss, SarahHarrah, PeterSmith, RebekahWalker, Whitney2016-05-312016-05-312016-04-08Elliot Boyle, Braden Catt, Sarah Goss, Peter Harrah, Rebekah Smith, and Whitney Walker. 2016 April 8. Reimagining the River: An Outdoor Vision of the Anthropocene and the White River through the Lens of Place. Poster session presented at IUPUI Research Day 2016, Indianapolis, Indiana.https://hdl.handle.net/1805/9719poster abstractIn 2016, the International Union of Geological Sciences will decide whether or not human impact on the Earth constitutes a new geologic epoch – the Anthropocene. If agreed upon, this epoch will acknowledge the effects human agency has upon the stratigraphic record, and the implications of a human-driven world. Reimagining the River takes the global Anthropocene to the City of Indianapolis by creating an outdoor museum of the White River. This museum exhibit will display the past, present, and future of the White River, showcasing the historical narrative of the human-river relationship. Exploring the Anthropocene through the story of the White River will engage the citizens of Indianapolis to develop a sense of ownership for the intertwined state of the River and Indianapolis. The intention of this engagement is to build a community that reimagines what the river was, is, and can become. Reimagining the River will be located on the White River State Park Bridge, and will feature audiovisual elements that relate current scenes surrounding the River to the past. Historical photographs complemented with a brief historical narrative will be juxtaposed with the areas surrounding the installation, framing Indianapolis’ urban environment as the exhibit. The installation will be accessible to all demographics, including children and individuals with disability. The exhibit will also include resources to encourage further audience participation, including podcasts, geocaching, and a website. Ongoing research pathways will be created to encourage the tracking and measurement of audience engagement and understanding of how human agency has affected the White River, its tributaries, and the City of Indianapolis.en-USInternational Union of Geological SciencesWhite Riverhuman impactAnthropoceneIndianapolisReimagining the River: An Outdoor Vision of the Anthropocene and the White River through the Lens of PlacePoster