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The Legacy of American Copper Smelting: Industrial Heritage Versus Environmental Policy

5.00 (1 ratings by Goodreads)

English

By (author): Bode J. Morin

Throughout world history, copper has been a significant metal for a vast number of cultures, from the oldest civilisations on record to the Bronze Age and Greek and Roman antiquity. Though replaced by iron as the primary metal for tools and weapons in ancient civilisations, copper found new resurgence in the nineteenth century when it was discovered to have particularly high thermal and electrical conductivity. Copper mining quickly escalated into a large-scale industry, and because of its vast reserves and innovative mining techniques, the United States seized the reins of global production with the opening of significant copper mines in Tennessee and Michigan in the 1840s and Montana in the 1870s.

Copper-mining prosperity and Americas dominance of the industry came with a heavy environmental price, however. As rich copper deposits declined with increased mining efforts, large deposits of leaner oresoftentimes less than one percent purehad to be mined to keep pace with Americas technological thirst for copper. Processing such ore left an inordinate amount of industrial waste, such as tailings and slag deposits from the refining process and toxic materials from the ores themselves, and copper mining regions around the United States began to see firsthand the landscape degradation wrought by the industry.

In The Legacy of American Copper Smelting, Bode J. Morin examines Americas three premier copper sites: Michigans Keweenaw Peninsula, Tennessees Copper Basin, and Butte- Anaconda, Montana. Morin focuses on what the copper industry meant to the townspeople working in and around these three major sites while also exploring the smelters environmental effects. Each site dealt with pollution management differently, and each site had to balance an EPA-mandated cleanup effort alongside the preservation of a once-proud industry.

Morins work sheds new light on the EPAs efforts to utilise Superfund dollars and/or protocols to erase the environmental consequences of copper-smelting while locals and preservationists tried to keep memories of the copper industry alive in what were dying or declining post-industrial towns. This book will appeal to anyone interested in the American history of copper or heritage preservation studies, as well as historians of modern America, industrial technology, and the environment. See more
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Product Details
  • Weight: 571g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Apr 2013
  • Publisher: University of Tennessee Press
  • Publication City/Country: United States
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781572339507

About Bode J. Morin

Bode J. Morin is an industrial archaeologist and historic site administrator directing Eckley Miners Village outside of Weatherly Pennsylvania USA.

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