Wildlife in Unexpected Places

Date:

10 October 2026

Time:

10:00am-5:00pm

Location:

Rewley House 1 Wellington Square, Oxford, OX1 2JA

Event status

Event status:

Applications being accepted

Dates

Dates:

10 October 2026

Study Format

Study Format:

In-person day/weekend

Fees

Fees:

£140.00

On an island known globally for its severe environmental degradation, wildlife is thriving in unexpected places. Stag beetles burgeon in London’s neglected graveyards, the rare and delicate Young’s helleborine flourishes on West Lothian’s abandoned shale oil slag heaps, and regenerative farming is shaping new opportunities for wildlife and food production to blossom together. 

While nature recovery initiatives tend, understandably, to focus on the ecological here and now and to orient themselves towards more biodiverse futures, archaeologists, geographers and historians are increasingly showing how understandings of past wildlife are central to creating wilder landscapes in the future.

This day event features leading multidisciplinary research that showcases wildlife’s capacity to defy expectations, to surface in surprising disciplinary contexts (archaeology and heritage studies), to play a key role in practices traditionally seen as environmentally harmful (farming and industry), and to show extraordinary resilience amidst scenes of human-led destruction. 

Following a series of talks and Q&A, we will head out into Oxford to explore examples of resurgent wildlife in an urban landscape.

Please note:

  •  this day event involves a guided walk around University Park Farm in Oxford City Centre. The route is approximately 5 km long, starting and ending at Rewley House. Participants should wear sensible shoes and clothing for the walk.
  • this event will close for enrolments at 23:59 on 7 October 2026.
     

Book this course

Book your place online using the button below.

Accommodation

If you wish to stay with us before and/or after the event, please contact our Residential Centre for availability and discounted rates.

Call +44 (0) 1865 270362 or email res-ctr@conted.ox.ac.uk

Our accommodation at Rewley House in Wellington Square has been rated as 4-Star Campus Accommodation under Visit England. All bedrooms are modern, comfortably furnished with tea/coffee making facilities, Freeview television, private bath/shower rooms and free WiFi. For more details see our accommodation information.

Recommended reading

Cooper A, Roushannafas T. 2025. People and time in nature: Positioning archaeology in an ecoclimate crisis. Archaeological Dialogues. Published online 2025:1-18. doi:10.1017/S1380203825100184 [open access]

Costello, E. 2020. Hill farmers, habitats and time: the potential of
historical ecology in upland management and conservation, Landscape Research, 45:8, 951-965,
DOI: 10.1080/01426397.2020.1798367  

Ernwein, M. 2021. Bringing Urban Parks to Life: The More-Than-Human Politics of Urban Ecological Work. Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 111(2) pp. 559–576. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/24694452.2020.1773230
Manuscript available open access at:  https://oro.open.ac.uk/73115/

Tree Amble podcast with Claire Whittle 

Programme details

9.45am           
Registration at Rewley House 

 

10am         
Wildlife and farming 
Claire Whittle

 

11.15am
Tea/coffee break

 

11.45am         
Wildlife and urban spaces 
Marion Ernwein

 

1pm           
Lunch break

 

2pm           
Archaeological wildlife 
Anwen Cooper

 

3pm           
Short break

 

3.15pm            
Guided walk to University Park Farm 
Nigel Fisher

 

5pm
Return to Rewley House for refreshments

 

5.30pm           
Event ends

Fees

Description Costs
Event Fee (includes tea/coffee) £140.00
Baguette lunch £7.90
Hot lunch (2-course) £22.40

Funding

If you are in receipt of a UK state benefit, or are a care-leaver in the UK, you may be eligible for a reduction of 50% of tuition fees. Please see the below link for full details:

Concessionary fees for short courses

Payment

Please see the terms and conditions for our open-access courses.

Dr Anwen Cooper

Anwen Cooper leads the UKRI-funded ‘Rewilding’ later prehistory project at Oxford Archaeology, in partnership with the Universities of Oxford, Exeter, York and Toulouse, Historic England and Knepp Castle rewilding initiative. She has been studying human-landscape relations in later prehistory for over 25-years, as a fieldworker and through her research into English landscapes, prehistoric grave goods, rivers, and the exceptionally well-preserved archaeology of the Must Farm pile-dwelling settlement, Cambridgeshire. The ‘Rewilding’ project team are developing an evidence base, methods and ideas for investigating past wildlife in order to build a stronger basis for archaeologists to link into ongoing nature recovery interests and agendas.

Marion Ernwein

Mr Nigel Fisher – Tutor

Nigel Fisher is the Conservator of Wytham Woods. The Woods are one of the most researched areas of land in the world. Nigel has worked in the field of nature conservation for almost thirty years, and has been involved with conservation courses within the Department for Continuing Education for the last decade.

Claire Whittle

Module code: O26P110BIJ

Please use the ‘Book’ button on this page. Alternatively, please contact us to obtain an application form.

View our terms and conditions

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