Schweitzer Fachinformationen
Wenn es um professionelles Wissen geht, ist Schweitzer Fachinformationen wegweisend. Kunden aus Recht und Beratung sowie Unternehmen, öffentliche Verwaltungen und Bibliotheken erhalten komplette Lösungen zum Beschaffen, Verwalten und Nutzen von digitalen und gedruckten Medien.
Louis S. Warren is the W. Turrentine Jackson Professor of Western U.S. History at the University of California, Davis. He is a two-time winner of the Caughey Western History Association Prize, a Guggenheim Fellow, and recipient of the Albert Beveridge Award of the American Historical Association and the Bancroft Prize in American History.
Series Editor's Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: What is Environmental History?
1 The Nature of Indian America Before Columbus
Article: William M. Denevan, "The Pristine Myth: The Landscape of the Americas in 1492" (Annals of the Association of American Geographers 82(3) 1992: 369-385)
Documents
Richard Nelson, "The Watchful World" (from Richard Nelson, Make Prayers to the Raven: A Koyukon View of the Northern Forest (University of Chicago, 1983): 14 - 32.
From Gilbert Wilson, Buffalo Bird Woman's Garden (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1987)
Images of Florida Indians planting and making an offering of a stag to the sun (Images and text extracts from Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues, The Work of Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues, Vols. I and II).
U.S. Geological Survey, map of Bitterroot Forest Reserve showing burned areas, 1890.
2 The Other Invaders: Deadly Diseases and Extraordinary Animals
Article: Alfred W. Crosby, "Virgin Soil Epidemics" (excerpted from Ecological Imperialism: The Biological Expansion of Europe, 900 - 1900 (Cambridge, 1987))
Frank Givens, "Saynday and Smallpox: The White Man's Gift"
From Thomas James, Three Years among the Indians and Mexicans
John C. Ewers, "Horse Breeding"
George Catlin, "Wild Horses at Play"
3 Colonial Natures: Marketing the Countryside
Article: William Cronon, "A World of Fields and Fences" excerpt from Changes in the Land: Indians Colonists and the Ecology of New England (Hill & Wang, 1983)
Robert Cushman, "Reasons and Considerations Touching the Lawfulness of Removing out of England into the Parts of America" (1622)
Lion Gardener, "Livestock and War in Colonial New England"
Spanish priests Joseph Murguia and Thomas de la Pena explain Indian frustration with settler livestock in colonial California
4 Slavery and the South Through Environmental History
Article: Mart Stewart, "Towards an Environmental History of the U.S. South"
newspaper advertisements for African slaves "from 'The Rice Coast' of West Africa, with knowledge of rice growing"
Wilderness songs of enslaved people, William Francis Allen, Slave Songs of the United States (1867)
Frederick Law Olmsted, "The Rice District"
5 Frontier Expansion and Waste
Article: Alan Taylor, "Wasty Ways": Stories of American Settlement" (from Environmental History 3(3) July 1998: 291 - 309 (excerpted)).
James Fenimore Cooper on "The Wasty Ways of Pioneers"
John J. Audubon and the Wonder of the Passenger Pigeon, 1830s
Reporting on Passenger Pigeons (1850)
Frederick J. Haskin, "One Bird Survives Millions" (1913)
Edwin Bryant, What I Saw in California
Thomas Cole, Excerpt from "Essay on American Scenery" (1836)
6 Environmental Reform In City and Factory
Article: Charles E. Rosenberg, From The Cholera Years: The United States in 1832, 1849, and 1866 ("Introduction," and "The Epidemic," from The Cholera Years (1962, rev. ed. 1987), 1-7, 13 - 39, excerpted)
"The Metropolitan Board of Health Suppresses Nuisances" (1866)
"Underground Life-Health Officers Clean Out a Dive" (1873)
San Francisco fire, 1850s
Los Angeles crowd with water flowing into aqueduct
Dynamited LA aqueduct, 1927.
Alice Hamilton describes the industrial workplace of the early 1900s (1943)
7 Emerging Markets and Vanishing Animals
Article: Dan Flores, "Bison Ecology and Bison Diplomacy Redux: Another Look at the Southern Plains from 1800 to 1850" (from Dan Flores, The Natural West: Environmental History in the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains (University of Oklahoma, 2001)).
Billy Dixon, "Memories of buffalo hunting" (1870s)
Harper's Weekly, "Curing Hides and Bones" (1874)
Drake Hotel, Thanksgiving Menu, 1886
Baleen Demand and the Destruction of Whales (1907)
Advertisement for Thomson's Glove-Fitting Corset (1874)
"Destruction of Birds for Millinery Purposes," (1886)
"Cruelties of Fashion-Fine Feathers Make Fine Birds" (1883)
8 The Many Uses of Progressive Conservation
Article: Benjamin Heber Johnson, "Conservation, Subsistence, and Class at the Birth of Superior National Forest" (Environmental History 4(1) January 1999, 80 - 99).
Gifford Pinchot, "The Meaning of Conservation"
"Mr. A. A. Anderson, Special Supervisor of the Yellowstone and Teton Timber Reserves, Talks Interestingly of the Summer's Work"
Women Activists Take on Bird Hat Fashion
--Celia Thaxter, "Woman's Heartlessness" (1887)
Charles Askins Describes Game and Hunting Conditions in the South
Ben Senowin testifies about being apprehended for game law violations
9 National Parks and the Trouble With Wilderness
Article: William Cronon, "The Trouble with Wilderness, or, Getting Back to the Wrong Nature" (from William Cronon, ed., Uncommon Ground (Norton, 1995).
John Muir on Saving Hetch Hetchy
Peter Oscar Little Chief requests permission to hunt in Glacier Park
National Parks Act, 1916; Wilderness Act, 1964
10 Conservation and the New Deal
Article: Neil Maher, "A New Deal Body Politic: Landscape, Labor, and the Civilian Conservation Corps," Environmental History, 7, no. 3 (Summer 2002): 435-461 (excerpt)
Ann Marie Low, Farmer's Daughter, Describes the New Deal
Excerpt from Russell Moore, Roosevelt Riddles (1936)
Photo Gallery--Dorothea Lange and Arthur Rothstein Capture the Dust Bowl
Eli Gorman and Deneh Bitsilly Remember New Deal Livestock Reduction in Navajo Country (1974)
11 Something In the Wind: Radiation, Pesticides, and Air Pollution
Article: Robert Gottlieb, "Reconstructing Environmentalism: Complex Movements, Diverse Roots" (Environmental History 17(4) Winter, 1993: 1-19 (excerpted).
"Fallout: The Silent Killer" (1959)
From Rachel Carson, Silent Spring (1962)
Monsanto Corporation, excerpt from "The Desolate Year" (1962)
The Hugh Moore Fund, "The Population Bomb" (1954)
The Air Pollution Control Act (1955)
The Clean Air Act, with amendments (2001)
United Farm Workers, "Pesticides: The Poisons We Eat" (1969)
12 Environmental Protection and the Environmental Movement
Article: J. Brooks Flippen, "Richard Nixon and the Triumph of Environmentalism" (excerpted from Flippen, Nixon and the Environment (New Mexico, 2000): 1- 16, 46-49, 83-87, 98, 233-6, 243-4, 250, 254-5).
National Environmental Policy Act (1969)
The Endangered Species Act (1973)
From Daniel Yankelovich, "The New Naturalism" (1972)
Gaylord Nelson Newsletter, "Earth Day" (1970)
Black Environmentalists See "Another Side of Pollution" (1970)
From Paul Ehrlich, The Population Bomb (1969)
13 Environmental Racism and Environmental Justice
Article: Eileen Maura McGurty, "From NIMBY to Civil Rights: The Origins of the Environmental Justice Movement" (excerpted from Environmental History 2(3) July, 1997: 301-323.
Lois Gibbs on toxic waste and environmental justice(1992)
From United Church of Christ, Toxic Wastes and Race in the United States (1987)
The Letter that Shook a Movement (1993)
Flint Water Advisory Task Force, "Final Report" (Excerpt) (2016)
14 Global Consumers and Global Environments
Article: Matt Klingle, "Spaces of Consumption in Environmental History," History and Theory, 42(4) Dec. 2003, 94 - 110 (excerpt)
A Botanist's Report on Bananas in Honduras (1931)
The Impact of Coffee Farming on Indigenous Peoples (2005)
State of Denial-California's Appetite for World Resources (2003)
15 Back-Lash Against the Environmental Movement
Article: James Morton Turner, "The Specter of Environmentalism: Wilderness, Environmental Politics, and the Evolution of the New Right," Journal of American History 96 (1) June, 2009: 123 - 149
Map of U.S. Federal Lands (2020)
Tim Peckinpaugh, "Special Report-The Specter of Environmentalism: The Threat of Environmental Groups" (1982)
Joe Lane (National Cattlemen's Association) and Larry Echohawk (Shoshone and Bannock Tribes of Idaho), testify about the Sagebrush Rebellion (1980)
Carl Pope, "The Politics of Plunder"
S. Fred Singer, "The Costs of Environmental Overregulation"
Mark Douglas Whitaker, "'Jobs vs. Environment' Myth"
16 Shifting Scale: Climate Change and Global Peril
Article: Mike Hulme, "Reducing the Future to Climate: A Story of Climate Determinism and Reductionism" (excerpt, from Osiris 2011 26:245-266)
Ben J. Wattenberg, "The Population Explosion is Over" (1996)
"World Population is Expected to Nearly Stop Growing by the End of the Century"
From United Nations, "World Population Prospects" (2019)
Graph of Economic Growth and Air Emission Trends, 1970 - 2018
Graph of Atmospheric CO2 Concentration, 1958-2020
Atmospheric CO2 concentrations, 800,000 BP-present
The Acid Rain Experience, 1990-2002
Atmospheric CFC Concentration, 1977-2019
Global Land-Ocean Temperature Index, 2020 (NASA)
Index
Given that so many people believe that America before Columbus was a version of the Garden of Eden, the history since then is usually understood as a fairly straightforward story, which goes like this: when Indians dominated America, the place was beautiful and natural. When Europeans arrived, they trashed the place.
The truth is far more complicated and interesting, however. William Denevan explores pre-contact Indian America with an eye to seeing how Indians shaped and changed the natural worlds around them. To be sure, most Indians did not impose nearly as great a strain on natural environments as subsequent non-Indian settlers or modern industrial capitalism eventually would. But nonetheless, they did alter the earth around them in important ways. This points to a key insight of environmental history: all peoples change nature to achieve their notion of the good life. To suggest that any people does not do this - that some people are part of nature without being willing or able to change it - is to remove them from history and to dehumanize them.
As you read Denevan's article, ask yourself how Native changes to the natural environment before 1500 differed from the kinds of alterations, modifications, and wholesale changes in nature that your society makes today. Is there any way in which they were similar? How does it change your perception of American history to consider that Indians did not live in a Garden of Eden?
The Pristine Myth: The Landscape of the Americas in 1492
William M. Denevan
(Annals of the Association of American Geographers 82(3) 1992: 369-385.)
This is the forest primeval .
Evangeline: A Tale of Acadie (Longfellow 1847)
What was the New World like at the time of Columbus? .
Scholarship has shown that Indian populations in the Americas were substantial [in 1492], that the forests had indeed been altered, that landscape change was commonplace. This message, however, seems not to have reached the public through texts, essays, or talks by both academics and popularizers who have a responsibility to know better ..
The evidence is convincing. By 1492 Indian activity throughout the Americas had modified forest extent and composition, created and expanded grasslands, and rearranged microrelief via countless artificial earthworks. Agricultural fields were common, as were houses and towns and roads and trails. All of these had local impacts on soil, microclimate, hydrology, and wildlife. This is a large topic, for which this essay offers but an introduction to the issues, misconceptions, and residual problems. The evidence, pieced together from vague ethnohistorical accounts, field surveys, and archaeology, supports the hypothesis that the Indian landscape of 1492 had largely vanished by the mid-eighteenth century, not through a European superimposition, but because of the demise of the native population. The landscape of 1750 was more "pristine" (less humanized) than that of 1492.
The size of the native population at contact is critical to our argument. The prevailing position, a recent one, is that the Americas were well-populated rather than relatively empty lands in 1492. In the words of the sixteenth-century Spanish priest, Bartolomé de las Casas, who knew the Indies well:
All that has been discovered up to the year forty-nine [1549] is full of people, like a hive of bees, so that it seems as though God had placed all, or the greater part of the entire human race in these countries.
(Las Casas, in MacNutt 1909, 314)
Las Casas believed that more than 40 million Indians had died by the year 1560. Did he exaggerate? In the 1930s and 1940s, Alfred Kroeber, Angel Rosenblat, and Julian Steward believed that he had. The best counts then available indicated a population of between 8 and 15 million Indians in the Americas. Subsequently, Carl Sauer, Woodrow Borah, Sherburne F. Cook, Henry Dobyns, George Lovell, N. David Cook, myself, and others have argued for larger estimates. Many scholars now believe that there were between 40 and 100 million Indians in the hemisphere (Denevan 1992). This conclusion is primarily based on evidence of rapid early declines from epidemic disease prior to the first population counts (Lovell 1992).
I have recently suggested a New World total of 53.9 million (Denevan 1992, xxvii). This divides into 3.8 million for North America, 17.2 million for Mexico, 5.6 million for Central America, 3.0 million for the Caribbean, 15.7 million for the Andes, and 8.6 million for lowland South America. These figures are based on my judgment as to the most reasonable recent tribal and regional estimates. Accepting a margin of error of about 20 percent, the New World population would lie between 43 and 65 million. Future regional revisions are likely to maintain the hemispheric total within this range.. In any event, a population between 40 and 80 million is sufficient to dispel any notion of "empty lands." Moreover, the native impact on the landscape of 1492 reflected not only the population then but the cumulative effects of a growing population over the previous 15,000 years or more.
European entry into the New World abruptly reversed this trend. The decline of native American populations was rapid and severe, probably the greatest demographic disaster ever (Lovell 1992). Old World diseases were the primary killer. In many regions, particularly the tropical lowlands, populations fell by 90 percent or more in the first century after contact. Indian populations (estimated) declined in Hispaniola from 1 million in 1492 to a few hundred 50 years later, or by more than 99 percent; in Peru from 9 million in 1520 to 670,000 in 1620 (92 percent); in the Basin of Mexico from 1.6 million in 1519 to 180,000 in 1607 (89 percent); and in North America from 3.8 million in 1492 to 1 million in 1800 (74 percent). An overall drop from 53.9 million in 1492 to 5.6 million in 1650 amounts to an 89 percent reduction (Denevan 1992, xvii-xxix). The human landscape was affected accordingly, although there is not always a direct relationship between population density and human impact (Whitmore et al. 1990, 37).
The replacement of Indians by Europeans and Africans was initially a slow process. By 1638 there were only about 30,000 English in North America (Sale 1990, 386), and by 1750 there were only 1.3 million Europeans and slaves (Meinig 1986, 247). For Latin America in 1750, Sánchez-Albornoz (1974, 7) gives a total (including Indians) of 12 million. For the hemisphere in 1750, the Atlas of World Population History reports 16 million (McEvedy and Jones 1978, 270). Thus the overall hemispheric population in 1750 was about 30 percent of what it may have been in 1492. The 1750 population, however, was very unevenly distributed, mainly located in certain coastal and highland areas with little Europeanization elsewhere. In North America in 1750, there were only small pockets of settlement beyond the coastal belt, stretching from New England to northern Florida (see maps in Meinig 1986, 209, 245). Elsewhere, combined Indian and European populations were sparse, and environmental impact was relatively minor.
Indigenous imprints on landscapes at the time of initial European contact varied regionally in form and intensity. Following are examples for vegetation and wildlife, agriculture, and the built landscape.
The forests of New England, the Midwest, and the Southeast had been disturbed to varying degrees by Indian activity prior to European occupation. Agricultural clearing and burning had converted much of the forest into successional (fallow) growth and into semi-permanent grassy openings (meadows, barrens, plains, glades, savannas, prairies), often of considerable size. Much of the mature forest was characterized by an open, herbaceous understory, reflecting frequent ground fires. "The de Soto expedition, consisting of many people, a large horse herd, and many swine, passed through ten states without difficulty of movement" (Sauer 1971, 283). The situation has been described in detail by Michael Williams in his recent history of American forests: "Much of the 'natural' forest remained, but the forest was not the vast, silent, unbroken, impenetrable, and dense tangle of trees beloved by many writers in their romantic accounts of the forest wilderness" (1989b, 33). "The result was a forest of large, widely spaced trees, few shrubs, and much grass and herbage .. Selective Indian burning thus promoted the mosaic quality of New England ecosystems, creating forests in many different states of ecological succession" (Cronon 1983, 49-51).
The extent, frequency, and impact of Indian burning is not without controversy. Raup (1937) argued that climatic change rather than Indian burning could account for certain vegetation changes. Emily Russell (1983), assessing pre-1700 information for the Northeast, concluded that: "There is no strong evidence that Indians purposely burned large areas," but Indians did "increase the frequency of fires above the low numbers caused by lightning," creating an open forest. But then Russell adds: "In most areas climate and soil probably played the major role in determining the precolonial forests." She regards Indian fires as mainly accidental and "merely" augmental to natural fires, and she discounts the reliability of many early accounts of...
Dateiformat: ePUBKopierschutz: Adobe-DRM (Digital Rights Management)
Systemvoraussetzungen:
Das Dateiformat ePUB ist sehr gut für Romane und Sachbücher geeignet – also für „fließenden” Text ohne komplexes Layout. Bei E-Readern oder Smartphones passt sich der Zeilen- und Seitenumbruch automatisch den kleinen Displays an. Mit Adobe-DRM wird hier ein „harter” Kopierschutz verwendet. Wenn die notwendigen Voraussetzungen nicht vorliegen, können Sie das E-Book leider nicht öffnen. Daher müssen Sie bereits vor dem Download Ihre Lese-Hardware vorbereiten.Bitte beachten Sie: Wir empfehlen Ihnen unbedingt nach Installation der Lese-Software diese mit Ihrer persönlichen Adobe-ID zu autorisieren!
Weitere Informationen finden Sie in unserer E-Book Hilfe.