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| biblioscope: An Archival Guide & Bibliography | Environmental History, 14.1 | The History Cooperative
14.1  
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January, 2009
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biblioscope

AN ARCHIVAL GUIDE & BIBLIOGRAPHY

ARTICLES


Barton, Gregory A, et al. "Environmental Conservation and Deforestation in British India 1855–1947: A Reinterpretation." Itinerario 32 (2 2008): 83–104. Looks at the history of forestry in British India from 1855 to 1947, examining the creation of the Indian Forest Service. Authors argue that the Indian Forest Service prevented capitalists from more extensively exploiting Indian forest resources during this time period.

Batie, Sandra S. "The Sustainability of U.S. Cropland Soils." In Perspectives on Sustainable Resources in America. Washington, DC: Resources for the Future, 2008. 64–103. Looks at the sustainability of U.S. cropland soils over the twentieth century, examining evolving sustainability concepts, government regulations, and research.

Bell, Edward L. "Cultural Resources on the New England Coast and Continental Shelf: Research, Regulatory, and Ethical Considerations from a Massachusetts Perspective." Coastal Management 37 (January 2009): 17–53. Summarizes the region's ancient and historical period cultural resources in environmental contexts, examines potential effects of coastal and near-shore developments in light of environmental impact review and global climate change, and advocates synthetic, local and regional scientific and historical narratives as parts of plans of action to implement coastal management goals.

Caillavet, Chantal. "A Native American System of Wetland Agriculture in Different Ecosystems in the Ecuadorian Andes (15th-eighteenth Centuries)." Environment and History 14 (August 2008): 331–353. Uses archival sources to examine rigged fields and wetland agricultural techniques of native populations in the northern Ecuadorian highlands of South America from the fifteenth through eighteenth centuries.

Callicott, J. Baird. "What 'Wilderness' in Frontier Ecosystems?" Environmental Ethics 30 (Fall 2008): 235–249. Looks at views on wilderness from Puritan and transcendentalist perspectives through twentieth century wilderness conservation and recreation ideas. Examines conflicts between varying perspectives on wilderness throughout American history.

Conroy, Rosemary. "A Man and His Mountain: How an Artist's Effort Led to the Permanent Preservation of Mount Monadnock." Forest Notes 258 (Winter 2008): 4–7. Looks at the role of artist Abbott Thayer in preserving the lands around Mount Monadnock, New Hampshire.de Vernal, Anne and Claude Hillaire-Marcel. "Natural Variability of Greenland Climate, Vegetation, and Ice Volume During the Past Million Years." Science 320 (June 2008): 1622–1625. A study of pollen grains preserved in marine sediment cores from the North Atlantic, revealing an unprecedented expansion of trees in Greenland during an interglacial period 400,000 years ago.

Duwors, Richard. "Documents from the Indian Fishing Rights Controversy in the Pacific Northwest." Pacific Northwest Quarterly 99 (Spring 2008): 55–65. Presents primary source documents related to the conflict over Native American fishing rights in Washington and Oregon during the 1960s.

Elie, Serge D. "The Waning of Soqotra's Pastoral Community Political Incorporation as Social Transformation." Human Organization 67 (3 2008): 335–345. A history of the Soqotra Archipelago island off the coast of Yemen, examining the impacts of the twentieth century implementation of environmental protections and an ecotourism development program.

Fields-Black, Edda L. "Untangling the Many Roots of West African Mangrove Rice Farming: Rice Technology in the Rio Nunez Region, Earliest Times to c.1800." Journal of African History 49 (1 2008): 1–21. Examines the specialized mangrove rice-farming systems developed in coastal Guinea's Rio Nunez region, and the evolution of rice farming practices in the region over the past 1,000 years.

Friskics, Scott. "The Twofold Myth of Pristine Wilderness: Misreading the Wilderness Act in Terms of Purity." Environmental Ethics 30 (Winter 2008): 381–399. Argues that the Wilderness Act of 1964 presented a forward-thinking notion of wilderness that connects humans with places and landscapes, rather than presenting a definition of wilderness as static and purity-based.

Gibson, Dave and Ken Rimany. "Defender of the Wilderness." New York State Conservationist 63 (October 2008): 2–7. Looks at the life of Paul Schaefer (1908–1997), a wilderness advocate who worked to protect New York State's Adirondack Forest Preserve throughout much of the twentieth century.

Goodall, Heather. "Riding the Tide: Indigenous Knowledge, History and Water in a Changing Australia." Environment and History 14 (August 2008): 355–384. Discusses historical changes in indigenous people's knowledge of their environments, with a focus on a case study of Aboriginal populations in the upper Darling River region of Australia during the nineteenth century.. . .

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