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Environmental
History:Researching
the Environment:
Value of Enviromental History Records for Research
Within the Environmental
History Virtual Research Collection you will find links
to records and images that document the wide array of public
and private perspectives on the acquisition, management, and use
of the Adirondack and Catskill Parks.
The records shed light
on the environmental, cultural, social, political, economic, and
scientific history of New York State's two great natural areas by
providing a wealth of information not only on the forest preserves,
but also on the parks, their inhabitants, and the millions of tourists
who have visited them for well over a century.
They provide information
on environmental issues such as
- acquisition (property seizures, legislation, acquisition and
lawsuits resulting development of the Ashokan Reservoir which
forced hundreds of residents off of their land and submerged entire
villages to provide more drinking water for New York City)
- management (shoreline and wetland usage, construction of roads
and highways including the Adirondack Northway/Interstate 87,
water resource development, regulations)
- use by businesses (lumber industry, forest products, development
of ski areas, Olympics)
- and use by individuals (recreation activities, land ownership,
property loss compensation, great camps, limits on private land
use, conservation efforts).
Of particular note are
- the history of science and technology, particularly 18th and
19th century cartography and surveying (for instance the largest
and most comprehensive state-supported topographical survey of
the 19 th century).
- the rise of wilderness exploration
- programs (such as Department of Environmental Conservation's
the reforestation and endangered species programs) designed to
protect as well as manage the natural resources of the Adirondacks
and Catskills
- efforts by the State to work with the federal government,
- other states, localities, and the private sector to study, contain,
and mitigate the harmful effects of acid rain.
- the birth of the conservation movement that flourished in New
York State and throughout the nation in the late 19th and early
20th century.
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