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| Biblioscope: An Archival Guide and Bibliography | Environmental History, 9.4 | The History Cooperative
9.4  
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October, 2004
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Biblioscope

An Archival Guide & Bibliography

Theses and Dissertations


Andrews, Thomas George. "The Road to Ludlow: Work, Environment, and Industrialization, 1870–1915." Ph.D. dissertation, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2003. 646 leaves. On the environmental impacts of industrialization and changing relationships between workers, capitalists, and the environment in Colorado during this era. Focuses on labor relations in the coal mining industry, with particular attention to the coal miners' strike of 1913–1914 and the massacre of striking miners in Ludlow, Colorado, in 1914.

Angiel, Randal. "Geography, Radioactive Contamination and Public Health: The Albany-Troy Rainout After 50 Years." Ph.D. dissertation, State University of New York at Albany, 2003. 154 leaves. Studies the public health impacts of radioactive fallout from a powerful nuclear weapon detonated in 1953 at the Nevada Test Site. The author asserts that radioactive particles from the bomb traveled with the jet stream eastward across the United States, mixed with clouds above Albany and Troy, New York, and fell to earth as a radioactive rainfall that contaminated much of the state and possibly surrounding areas.

Bain, Daniel Joseph. "400 Years of Land Use Impacts on Landscape Structure and Riparian Sediment Dynamics: Investigations Using Chromite Mining Waste and Property Mosaics." Ph.D. dissertation, Johns Hopkins University, 2003. 131 pp. Uses chromite mining waste as an indicator of sedimentation change in this study of the impact of human land settlement patterns on landscape structure and property divisions in the Gwynns Falls Watershed of Maryland from the mid-seventeenth century through the twentieth century.

Bergeron, Karine. "Naturalistes, Chasseurs Sportifs et Ecologistes: Trois Wildlife Painters Nord-Americains." Master's thesis, Universite Laval [Canada], 2003. 203 pp. Studies differing representations of wildlife and ecological philosophy in the artwork of North American artists John James Audubon (1780–1851), Carl Rungius (1869–1959), and Robert Bateman (1930- ). Text in French.

Bui, Lan Thi Phuong. "When the Forest Became the Enemy and the Legacy of American Herbicidal Warfare in Vietnam." Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard University, 2003. 296 leaves. On the environmental implications of the use of herbicides such as Agent Orange to defoliate forests in Vietnam by American armed forces during the Vietnam War in the 1960s. Focuses especially on the Kennedy administration.. . .

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