TY - JOUR AB - This reflective paper considers <em>Fluvial Tones</em>, an 8.15 minute audio track, I created by combining field recordings of the River Lee (Cork, Ireland) with short excerpts from interviews to explore the waterway as a confluence of human-environment relations. Rivers are an acute example of the Anthropocene as natural systems that have been directly and indirectly altered by socio-economic actions over millennia. By deploying the unique capacities to sound to evoke reactions to places, <em>Fluvial Tones</em> is discussed as an aural artefact to experience the specifics of the case study, while also connecting to the (mis)uses of rivers more generally. AU - Richard Scriven DA - 2020/8// DO - 10.16997/ahip.12 IS - 1 VL - 1 PB - University of Westminster Press PY - 2020 TI - Fluvial Tones: An Audio Exploration of a Shifting Riverscape T2 - Anthropocenes – Human, Inhuman, Posthuman UR - https://www.anthropocenes.net/article/id/665/ ER -