1.2 WHAT IS
ENVIRONMENTAL
HISTORY?
QUESTIONS AND APPROACHES
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2. Chinook Salmon: Environmental
History of
a Problem
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1800: In California, tens of
thousands of
Chinook Salmon migrated up the Sacramento River to the Shasta River to
spawn in their ancient grounds.
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1940: Only 80,000 recorded
during fall run.
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Today: Only 300-1000.
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Columbia River system: Only
909,000 Chinook
return to Columbia River and Snake River.
3. What Happened to the Salmon?
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Disputes between ranchers,
farmers, and environmentalists:
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Ranchers: "Stay off my property
and leave
me alone."
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Farmers: "People were getting
heartburn about
agencies buying land and converting it to habitat."
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Environmentalists: agricultural
diversions
from dams and silt disrupt spawning gravel and raise stream temperature.
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Resolution attempts: Fencing off
cattle; restoring
vegetation; releases of cold water.
4. What do we need to know?
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About salmon?
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About society?
5. The Chinook Salmon: An
Environmental History
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How should we write the
environmental history
of the Chinook salmon?
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What concepts should we use?
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How did change occur?
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Does history matter in future
choices and
decisions? If so, how?
6. How Would Environmental
Historians Approach
the Problem?
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Donald Worster
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Jared Diamond
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William Cronon
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Carolyn Merchant
- Three levels
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Guns, Germs, and Steel
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Stories and constructs
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Ecological revolutions
7. Donald Worster
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University of Kansas, Lawrence.
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Author of Nature's Economy
(1977);
Dust
Bowl (1979); Rivers of Empire (1985); A River Running
West
(2001).
-
In Major Problems:
"Cowboy Ecology"
(Ch 9); "Organic, Economic, and Chaotic Ecology" (Ch 13).
8. Worster: "Doing Environmental
History"
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To do environmental history, we
must "get
out of doors . . . and ramble into fields, woods, and the open air. It
is time we bought a good set of walking shoes, and we cannot avoid
getting
some mud on them."
9. Worster's Approach to the Chinook
Salmon Example
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Natural Environments of the Past:
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Evolution of river and ocean
ecology.
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Human Modes of Production:
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Pastoral mode of
production: ranching.
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Hydraulic mode of
production: capitalism.
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Perception, Ideology, and Value:
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Capitalist maximization of
profit.
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Instrumental use of nature.
10. Jared Diamond
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University of California, Los
Angeles, Geography
Department.
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Author of Guns, Germs, and
Steel:The Fates
of Human Societies (1997).
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In Major Problems:
"Predicting Environmental
History."
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Material, scientific,
deterministic explanation
of environmental history.
11. Diamond: "Predicting
Environmental History"
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"Why did human development
proceed at such
different rates on different continents for the past 13,000 years?"
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"The answer . . . has nothing to
do with differences
among peoples themselves, but instead lies in differences among the
biological
and geographical environments in which peoples found themselves."
12. Jared Diamond's Factors
Underlying the
Broadest Patterns of History
13. Diamond: "Guns, Germs, and
Steel"
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"A shorthand for those proximate
factors which
enabled modern Europeans to conquer peoples of other continents."
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Proximate Factors:
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Military technology based on
guns, steel swords, and horses.
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European maritime technology.
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Infectious diseases endemic in
Eurasia.
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European centralized political
organization.
14. Military Technology: Horses,
Steel Swords,
and the Conquest of Mexico
15. Marine Technology: Ocean-going Ships
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King Ferdinand looks out across
the Atlantic
Ocean as Columbus lands in the West Indies.
16. Epidemic Diseases: Smallpox
Strikes the
Indians of Mexico
17. Diamond: Ultimate Factors
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Sedentary societies
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Domesticated animals and plants.
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Number of candidate species for
domestication.
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East-West axis of Eurasia versus
North-South
Axis of Americas.
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Food surpluses give European
sedentary societies
ultimate advantage over New World gatherer-hunter-fishers.
18. The Major Five: Large
Domesticated Animals
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Eurasian origins. All are now
world-wide.
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Sheep. 8000 B.C.E. Southwest
Asia.
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Goat. 8000 B.C.E. Southwest Asia
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Cow (cattle, oxen). 6000 B.C.E.
Southwest
Asia, India, North Africa.
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Pig. 8000 B.C.E. China,
Southwest Asia.
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Horse. 4000 B.C.E. Ukraine.
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Introduced into the Americas by
explorers
and colonists after 1492.
19. Animal Origins of Human Disease
Human Disease
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Measles
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Tuberculosis
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Smallpox
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Influensia
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Pertussis
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Malaria
Animal origin (Eurasia)
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cattle (rinderpest)
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cattle
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cattle (cowpox)
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pigs and ducks
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pigs, dogs
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birds (chickens and ducks)
20. The Major Five: World Crops
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Wheat (Fertile Crescent)
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Corn (Mesoamerica)
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Rice (China, India, West Africa)
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Barley (India)
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Sorghum (West Africa)
21. New World Crops (Americas)
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Cereals: Corn.
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Pulses: Common bean, tepary
bean, scarlet
runner bean, lima bean, peanut.
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Melons: Squash, pumpkin.
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Fibers: Cotton, hemp.
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"Most areas where indigenous
food production
arose late or not at all offered exceptionally poor rather than rich
resources
to hunter-gatherers."
22. Agricultural Dominance of Europe
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"In most areas of the globe
suitable for food
production, hunter-gatherers met one of two fates: either they were
displaced
by . . . food producers, or else they survived only by adopting food
production
themselves."
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"Much of human history has
consisted of unequal
conflicts between the haves and the have-nots: between peoples with
farmer
power and those without it, or between those who acquired it at
different
times."
23. Continental Axes
24. Diamond's Approach to the
Chinook Salmon
Example
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"Guns, Germs, and Steel" gave
European settlers
a "proximate advantage."
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California Indians were
gatherer-hunter-fishers
who succumbed to European diseases.
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European settlers had
domesticated animals
and crops that gave Europeans an "ultimate advantage."
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Europeans easily colonized land
and rivers.
25. William Cronon
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University of Wisconsin, Madison.
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Author of Changes in the Land
(1983);
Nature’s
Metropolis (1992); editor of Uncommon Ground (1995).
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In Major Problems:
"Telling Stories
About Ecology" (Ch. 9); "The Trouble with Wilderness" (Ch. 11).
26. Cronon. "Using Environmental
History"
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"Is telling parables about
nature and the
human past a useful thing to do?" Yes.
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"The answers we environmental
historians give
to the question 'What's the story?' have the great virtue that they
remind
people of the immense human power to alter and find meaning in the
natural
world--and the even more immense power of nature to respond."
27. Cronon's Approach to the Chinook
Salmon
Example
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Blaming capitalism is too
deterministic; implies
a prophecy of environmental decline.
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Why not a "salmon-fishing mode
of production"?
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Salmon as a food is a cultural
construct.
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Food is good to think.
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Native Californians choose to
eat salmon in
relation to myths and rituals of world renewal and worship.
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European Americans choose to eat
salmon in
relation to myths and rituals of cholesterol reduction.
28. Carolyn Merchant
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University of California,
Berkeley.
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Author of The Death of Nature
(1980);
Ecological
Revolutions (1989); Radical Ecology (1992); Earthcare
(1996); Reinventing Eden (2003).
29. Merchant: "Interpreting
Environmental
History"
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"Over the past several decades,
environmental
historians . . . have become increasingly conscious of the place of
race,
gender, and class in the interpretation of history."
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"Race, gender, and class are
lenses through
which to view history and interpret human interactions with the
environment."
30. Ecological Revolutions
31. Merchant's Approach to the Chinook Salmon Example
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Ecology: Change in ocean
currents owing to
El Nino effects; unpredictability of salmon.
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Production: Change from Native
American fishing
ecology to capitalist ranching.
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Reproduction: Rise in California
population;
reproduction of U.S. laws and institutions.
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Consciousness: Change from
Indian ecocentric
to American egocentric, laissez-faire ethic.
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Social Construction: Race,
Gender, and Class.
32. Discussion Questions
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What questions, comments, or
problems do you
have concerning these approaches?
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Does knowing the environmental
history of
an environmental problem help us to make better choices in the future?
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