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October, 2008
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CONTENTS

Volume 13 • Number 4

October 2008


  From the editor


ARTICLES

629 Toxic Bodies/Toxic Environments: An Interdisciplinary Forum
  by Jody A. Roberts and Nancy Langston

636 Toxic Knowledge: A Mercurial Fugue in Three Parts
  by Michael Egan

643 On Missing New Orleans: Lost Knowledge and Knowledge Gaps in an Urban Hazardscape
  by Scott Frickel

651 Purity and Danger: Historical Reflections on the Regulation of Environmental Pollutants
  by Linda Nash

659 Environment, Health, and Missing Information
  by Barbara Allen

667 From 'the Dose Makes the Poison' to 'the Timing Makes the Poison': Conceptualizing Risk in the Synthetic Age
  by Sarah A. Vogel

674 Unraveling the Complexities of Joint Toxicity of Multiple Chemicals at the Tox Lab and the FDA
  by Frederick Rowe Davis

684 Risk Frameworks and Biomonitoring: Distributed Regulation of Synthetic Chemicals in Humans
  by Arthur Daemmrich

695 Chemical Regimes of Living
  by Michelle Murphy

704 Teaching Ecology during the Environmental Age, 1965–1908
  by Joel B. Hagen

724 Wilderness and the Brazilian Mind (I): Nation and Nature in Brazil from the 1920s to the 1940s
  by José Luiz de Andrade Franco and José Augusto Drummond

GALLERY

751 Frederick Rowe Davis On the Professionalization of Toxicology
 

INTERVIEW

757 Joachim Radkau
 

BOOK REVIEWS

769 Gerald W. Williams. The Forest Service: Fighting for Public Lands. Reviewed by James G. Lewis.

770 Susan Freinkel. American Chestnut: The Life, Death, and Rebirth of a Perfect Tree. Reviewed by Lori Vermaas.

771 T. C. Smout, Alan R. MacDonald, and Fiona Watson. A History of the Native Woodlands of Scotland, 1500–1920. Reviewed by Alasdair Ross.

773 Ann Botshon. Saving Sterling Forest: The Epic Struggle to Preserve New York's Highlands. Reviewed by David Stradling.

774 Margaret Herring and Sarah Greene. Forest of Time: A Century of Science at Wind River Experimental Forest. Reviewed by Jeff Nichols.

775 Shawn William Miller. An Environmental History of Latin America. Reviewed by José Drummond.

777 Steven Topik, Carlos Marichal, and Zephyr Frank, eds. From Silver to Cocaine: Latin American Commodity Chains and the Building of the World Economy, 1500–2000. Reviewed by Sterling Evans.

779 Carolyn Merchant. American Environmental History: An Introduction. Reviewed by Stephen H. Cutcliffe.

780 J. Donald Hughes. What Is Environmental History? Reviewed by Anthony N. Penna.

781 Martin V. Melosi and Joseph A. Pratt, eds. Energy Metropolis: An Environmental History of Houston and the Gulf Coast. Reviewed by J. Brooks Flippen.

783 Paul Kelton. Epidemics and Enslavement: Biological Catastrophe in the Native Southeast, 1492–1715. Reviewed by J. R. McNeill.

784 Paul D. Blanc. How Everyday Products Make People Sick: Toxins at Home and in the Workplace. Reviewed by Jacqueline Corn.

785 Gilbert LaFreniere. The Decline of Nature: Environmental History and the Western Worldview. Reviewed by Edward D. Melillo.

786 Robert Campbell. In Darkest Alaska: Travel and Empire Along the Inside Passage; and Ken Ross. Pioneering Conservation in Alaska. Reviewed by Lisa Mighetto.

789 Andrew P. Duffin. Plowed Under: Agriculture and Environment in the Palouse. Reviewed by Sara M. Gregg.

790 Libby Robin. How a Continent Created a Nation. Reviewed by Claire Brennan.

792 Peter Boomgaard, ed. A World of Water: Rain, Rivers and Seas in Southeast Asian Histories. Reviewed by Micah Muscolino.

793 Deborah Pickman. "The Troubled Roar of the Waters": Vermont in Flood and Recovery, 1927–1931. Reviewed by Kimberly A. Jarvis.

794 Andrew G. Kirk. Counterculture Green: The Whole Earth Catalog and American Environmentalism. Reviewed by Larry Benson.

BIBLIOSCOPE

786 Books

802 Articles

809 Theses and Dissertations

811 Archival Material


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