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| biblioscope: An Archival Guide & Bibliography | Environmental History, 10.3 | The History Cooperative
10.3  
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July, 2005
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biblioscope

AN ARCHIVAL GUIDE & BIBLIOGRAPHY

ARTICLES


Archibald, Robert R. "Legacy of the Lewis and Clark Expedition." History News 60 (Spring 2005): 20–23. The president of the Missouri Historical Society, which organized Lewis and Clark: The National Bicentennial Exhibition, explores the legacy of, fascination with, and lessons from the 1804–1806 Lewis and Clark expedition in modern-day American society.

Arenson, Adam. "Ansel Adams's Eucalyptus Tree, Fort Ross: Nature, Photography, and the Search for California." California History 82 (4 2005): 10–24. Examines one of Ansel Adams's lesser-known photographs, Eucalyptus Tree: Fort Ross, California (1969) as illustrative of aspects both of California's history and of Adams's own personal history and emerging environmental consciousness.

Bankoff, Greg. "Horsing Around: The Life and Times of the Horse in the Philippines at the Turn of the Twentieth Century." In Smallholders and Stockbreeders: Histories of Foodcrop and Livestock Farming in Southeast Asia, edited by Peter Boomgaard and David Henley. Leiden, The Netherlands: KITLV Press, 2004. 233 55. Explores the effects of horses on economics and the environment in Philippine society at the turn of the twentieth century, and their inverse effects on the life of the Philippine horse.

Barnett, LeRoy. "An American Need for a Russian Weed." Michigan History 89 (March/April 2005): 29–33. Describes Michigan's World War II-era experiments with latex extraction from the roots of kok-saghyz, a Russian breed of dandelion, to make up for America's loss of overseas rubber sources.

Barwegen, Martine. "Browsing in Livestock History: Large Ruminants and the Environment in Java, 1850–2000." In Smallholders and Stockbreeders: Histories of Foodcrop and Livestock Farming in Southeast Asia, edited by Peter Boomgaard and David Henley. Leiden, The Netherlands: KITLV Press, 2004. 283 305. Examines factors from 1850 to 2000 that influenced how and why certain breeds came into existence while others declined.

Beatty, Russell A. "Prescribed Grazing." Landscape Architecture 95 (March 2005): 50–57. Account of how early twenty-first century landscape managers, such as those at Sea Ranch in California, are rediscovering the traditional method of grazing to control vegetation. Nineteenth-century park designers, including Frederick Law Olmsted, used sheep to "mow" in places like Central Park.

Best, Allen. "A Divine Sanction: Manifest Destiny, Landscape and Religion in the Colorado Wilderness." Forest Magazine 7 (Spring 2005): 38–43. Explores the nineteenth-century fascination with a geographic feature in the Colorado Rockies known as the "Mountain of the Holy Cross" for the perpendicular fissures on its eastern face. After being documented by William Henry Jackson of the 1873 Hayden Survey, the cross became a subject of poems, paintings, and religious admiration. Many saw the feature as an embodiment of Manifest Destiny, or a divine sanction for westward expansion.

Bettelheim, Matthew. "Marmorata: The Famed Mud Turtle of the San Francisco Market." California History 82 (4 2005): 26–42. Examines the history of the terrapin (western pond turtle, or clemmys marmorata), from its utilization by California's Native American peoples, to its sought-after status as a soup ingredient the in the early twentieth-century San Francisco market, to its endangerment as of 2005 due in part to habitat loss.

Biel, Alice Wondrak. "The Bearer Has Permission: A Brief History of Research Permitting in Yellowstone National Park." Montana the Magazine of Western History 54 (Winter 2004): 16–31. History of research permitting in Yellowstone National Park since the U.S. Geological Survey expeditions of the 1870s. Argues that this history reflects the larger story of the National Park Service's science program and the evolving debate over appropriate uses for national parks.

Binnema, Theodore, and Kevin Douglas Hutchings. "The Emigrant and the Noble Savage: Sir Francis Bond Head's Romantic Approach to Aboriginal Policy in Upper Canada, 1836–1838." Journal of Canadian Studies 39 (Winter 2005): 115 38. Explores how Sir Francis Bond Head (1793–1875), Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada from 1836–1838, used Romantic notions exalting primitivism and the "noble savage" to justify his plan of relocating the Anishinaabeg peoples from their traditional territories in present-day southern Ontario to Manitoulin Island. Argues that many Romantic perceptions of Aboriginal peoples were consistent with colonial policies, which sought to segregate them.. . .

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