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Mining California : An Ecological History

by Andrew C. Isenberg

Synopsis

An environmental History of California during the Gold Rush Between 1849 and 1874 almost $1 billion in gold was mined in California. With little available capital or labor, here's how: high-pressure water cannons washed hillsides into sluices that used mercury to trap gold but let the soil wash away; eventually more than three times the amount of earth moved to make way for the Panama Canal entered California's rivers, leaving behind twenty tons of mercury every milerivers overflowed their banks and valleys were flooded, the land poisoned. In therush to wealth, the same chain of foreseeable consequences reduced California's forests and grasslands. Not since William Cronon's Nature's Metropolis has a historian so skillfully applied John Muir's insight"When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the universe"to the telling of the history of the American West. Beautifully told, this is western environmental history at its finest.

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Book Information

Copyright year 2006
ISBN-13 9780809069323
ISBN-10 0809069326
Class Copyright
Publisher Farrar, Straus & Giroux
Subject History;Nature
File Size 150 MB
Number of Pages 256
Length of Recording 11
Shelf No. KY738
Ages 20-99