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| Biblioscope: An Archival Guide & Bibliography | Environmental History, 9.1 | The History Cooperative
9.1  
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January, 2004
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Biblioscope

An Archival Guide & Bibliography

Articles


Allen, John L. "Landscape Change at the Confluence: From Lewis and Clark to the Present." North Dakota History 69 (Nos. 2, 3, & 4, 2003): 2–23. Examines human impact on vegetation, wildlife, water supply, soils, and climate in North Dakota from the time of the 1804–1806 exploratory expedition of the western United States led by Meriwether Lewis (1774–1809) and William Clark (1770–1838) to the present. Focuses on the region where the Missouri and Yellowstone rivers converge, and argues that the area has essentially been a managed ecosystem throughout this historic period.

Andreen, William L. "The Evolution of Water Pollution Control in the United States—State, Local, and Federal Efforts, 1789–1972: Part I." Stanford Environmental Law Journal 22 (January 2003): 145–200. Describes the growth of water pollution as a serious environmental problem and describes efforts at the state and local level to regulate water quality and control water pollution. Part II, which focuses on the evolution of federal regulatory control of water quality, was published in the June 2003 issue of the same journal.

Andreen, William L. "The Evolution of Water Pollution Control in the United States—State, Local, and Federal Efforts, 1789–1972: Part II." Stanford Environmental Law Journal 22 (June 2003): 215–294. Focuses on the evolution of federal regulatory control of water quality with an emphasis on the legislative history of the 1972 Clean Water Act. Part I, which focuses on state and local efforts to control water pollution, was published in the January 2003 issue of the same journal.

Brown, Jessica, Nora Mitchell, and Jacquelyn Tuxill. "Partnerships and Lived-in Landscapes: An Evolving US System of Parks and Protected Areas." Parks 13 (No. 2, Category V, 2003): 31–41. On the growing role of partnerships between the United States National Park Service and local communities or nongovernmental organizations to create and manage protected areas of historical importance since the late 1970s. Discusses specifically: (1) Ebey's Landing National Historical Reserve, established in 1978 in Washington State; (2) John M. Chafee Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor, designated in 1986 in Massachusetts and Rhode Island; (3) the proposed Champlain-Richelieu Valley International Heritage Corridor in New York, Vermont, and Quebec, Canada; and (4) Cuyahoga Valley National Park, established in 1974 in Ohio.

Chang, Sun Joseph. "Quarterly Southern Pine Sawtimber Stumpage Prices in Louisiana Over the Last 45 Years: Bugs, Owls, and Water." Forest Landowner 62 (March/April 2003): 33–37. Studies issues that have impacted changes in southern pine sawtimber stumpage prices in Louisiana from 1955 to 2000, including: (1) southern pine beetle outbreaks in the mid-1980s, (2) the listing of the northern spotted owl as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act in the late 1980s, and (3) high rainfall amounts in the late 1990s.

Coleman, Frank M. "The Encoded Frontier: From Open Space to Ad Space." Capitalism, Nature, Socialism 14 (June 2003): 135–162. On the significant influence of American historian Frederick Jackson Turner's (1861–1932) "Frontier Hypothesis" of 1893 on representations and perceptions of nature in American advertising campaigns, photography, and environmental history.

Colten, Craig E. "Cypress in New Orleans: Revisiting the Observations of Le Page du Pratz." Louisiana History 64 (Fall 2003): 463–477. Analyzes the validity of historian Antoine Simon Le Page du Pratz's (d. 1775) claims that formerly abundant cypress forests had been mostly cleared by the mid-eighteenth century.

Cosens, Barbara A. "A New Approach in Water Management or Business as Usual? The Milk River, Montana." Journal of Environmental Law and Litigation 18 (Spring 2003): 1–50. Reviews the twentieth-century history of water policy and water rights disputes pertaining to use of water resources from the Milk River in Montana, and discusses a 2001 water rights settlement between the U.S. federal government, the state government of Montana, and the Gros Ventre and Assiniboine Tribes of the Fort Belknap Reservation.

Crouse, Mike. "Changing with the Seasons: Doug Schlatter Contracting, Inc., Roseburg, Oregon." Loggers World 39 (September 2003): 7, 9, 13, 16, 19, 24. On the career of Oregon logging contractor Doug Schlatter. Discusses the logging and sawmill business of Doug's father and uncle which operated from the 1950s until the late 1960s when they went into the Christmas tree farming business; Doug's work with Weyerhaeuser Company after graduating from community college in the 1970s; and the development of his own logging contracting business with his father and brother beginning in 1979.. . .

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