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Environmental History of the US: Some Important Thinkers

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Presentation on theme: "Environmental History of the US: Some Important Thinkers"— Presentation transcript:

1 Environmental History of the US: Some Important Thinkers
                                                                                                                                                                                     A Middle-Aged John Muir at His Desk John Muir National Historic Site. E1-21 Close This Window                                                                                                                                                                                      A Middle-Aged John Muir at His Desk John Muir National Historic Site. E1-21 Close This Window Environmental History of the US: Some Important Thinkers                      From Frontier Worldview to the Environmental Movement Names to Know: Henry David Thoreau John Muir Theodore Roosevelt Rachel Carson Aldo Leopold

2 The Frontier Era (1607-1890) Frontier Environmental Worldview:
Vast & “Inexhaustible” Resources Hostile, Dangerous Wilderness to Be Conquered 1890 – Frontier “Closed” – no longer a line where the population density was less than 2 people per square mile

3 American Bison/American Buffalo – hunted almost to extinction during the 1800’s.

4 Early Alarms (1832-1870) Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)
Concerned with Species Loss in E. Massachusetts. Life in the Woods (1854) George Perkins Marsh ( ) Scientist, Member of Congress from Vt. Man and Nature (1864) – deforestation -> desertification, Earth will look like the moon. Used Science, Case Studies (Mediterranean) Need for Resource Conservation

5 Government and Citizen Involvement (1870-1930)
Forest Reserve Act, 1891 Fed Gov’t Responsible for Protecting Public Lands (Harrison, Cleveland, McKinley) – Forest Lands John Muir ( ) Founded Sierra Club Forest Preservation Yosemite (1890) and Sequoia National Park, Muir Woods Proposed National Park System

6 Government and Citizen Involvement (1870-1930)
Theodore Roosevelt ( ) President Gained Power to Designate Public Lands as Wildlife Refuges. Tripled Size of National Forest Reserves. 1905: US Forest Service (193 mil acres forests and grasslands) 1906: Antiquities (ruins and artifacts) Act -> Grand Canyon (protect public lands from destruction, excavation, etc) Later: 1916: National Park Service (manages all parks, monuments and historical properties)

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8 Great Depression and War (1930-1960)
Franklin D. Roosevelt Land Purchases From Private Owners Jobs Programs 1930s Civilian Conservation Corps (1933) Unemployed work planting trees Developing/maintaining parks Waterways, dams

9 Environmental Awakening (1960-1980)
Rachel Carson ( ) Biologist Sea Around Us, 1951 Silent Spring, 1962 Effects of Widespread DDT Use Beginning of Modern Environmental Movement in US

10 Environmental Awakening (1960-1980)
Wilderness Act (1964) Muir Idea Undeveloped Land to be Protected Earth Day April 20, 1970 Environmental Protection Agency (1970) Endangered Species Act (1973) Protection for species and habitats

11 Environmental Awakening (1960-1980)
Bureau of Land Management (1978) Restricts Uses of Public Land Maintain health, diversity and productivity Creates Friction (regulations of use, population growth) Push Back – Wise Use Movement (1988) (more private, less government control) Department of Energy (1977) Develop Long Range Energy Strategy Superfund (1980) Task of Cleaning Up Abandoned Waste Sites

12 Recent Past Less Large Scale (really? 2010) Big Idea Activities
Kyoto Protocol (1997) Objective to Slow Global Warming US Withdraws 2001

13 Aldo Leopold (1887-1948) Professor Sand County Almanac (1949)
Land Ethics, Environmental Ethics, Nature and Wildlife Preservation

14 All ethics so far evolved rest upon a single premise: that the individual is a member of a community of interdependent parts. That land is a community is the basic concept of ecology, but that land is to be loved and respected is an extension of ethics. The land ethic changes the role of Homo Sapiens from conqueror of the land-community to plain member and citizen of it. We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity belonging to us. When we see land as a commodity to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect. Anything is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise.

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