عدسة مكبرة
بحث محمل

Craig E. Colten 
Southern Waters 
The Limits to Abundance

الدعم
Adobe DRM
غلاف Craig E. Colten: Southern Waters (ePUB)

Water has dominated images of the South throughout history, from Hernando de Soto’s 1541 crossing of the Mississippi to tragic scenes of flooding throughout the Gulf South after Hurricane Katrina. But these images tell only half the story: as urban, industrial, and population growth create unprecedented demands on water in the South, the problems of pollution and water shortages grow ever more urgent. In Southern Waters: The Limits to Abundance, Craig E. Colten addresses how the South — in an environment fraught with uncertainty — can navigate the twin risks of too much water and not enough.
From the arrival of the first European settlers, the South’s inhabitants have pursued a course of maximum exploitation and control of the area’s plentiful waters, investing widely in wetland drainage and massive flood-control projects. Disputes over southern waterways go back nearly as far: obstruction of fish migration by mill dams prompted new policies to protect aquatic life as early as the colonial era. Colten argues that such conflicts, which have heightened dramatically since the explosive urbanization of the mid-twentieth century, will only become more frequent and intense, making the shift toward sustainable use a national imperative.
In tracing the evolving uses and abuses of southern waters, Colten offers crucial insights into the complex historical geography of water throughout the region. A masterful analysis of the ways in which past generations harnessed and consumed water, Southern Waters also stands as a guide to adapting our water usage to cope with the looming shortage of this once-abundant resource.

€21.99
طرق الدفع

عن المؤلف

Craig E. Colten is the former Carl O. Sauer Professor of Geography at Louisiana State University. He is the author of
An Unnatural Metropolis: Wresting New Orleans from Nature and
Southern Waters: The Limits to Abundance.
لغة الإنجليزية ● شكل EPUB ● صفحات 280 ● ISBN 9780807156520 ● حجم الملف 7.3 MB ● الناشر LSU Press ● مدينة Baton Rouge ● بلد US ● نشرت 2014 ● للتحميل 24 الشهور ● دقة EUR ● هوية شخصية 5054380 ● حماية النسخ Adobe DRM
يتطلب قارئ الكتاب الاليكتروني قادرة DRM

المزيد من الكتب الإلكترونية من نفس المؤلف (المؤلفين) / محرر

12٬709 كتب إلكترونية في هذه الفئة