Restoration and History

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biology
Case Study
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conservation
cultural landscape restoration
Dense
ecological
Ecological Restoration
ecological restoration policy case studies
ecology
ecosystem management
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Forest Fi Res
frans
Glen Affric
historical ecology
Historical Fi Delity
HRE
Japanese Rice Paddies
Juniper
Mammoths
Marcus Hall
paleoecological analysis
pasture
Peat Cutting
pleistocene
Pleistocene Rewilding
Raised Bog
Restoration Project
rewilding
Rewilding Project
rewilding strategies
Salt Marsh
Scots Pine
Shade Tolerant Tree Species
shifting baseline syndrome
vera
White Mountain Apache
White Mountain Apache Tribe
wood
Wood Pasture
Woodland Restoration

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415871761
  • Weight: 589g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Dec 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Once a forest has been destroyed, should one plant a new forest to emulate the old, or else plant designer forests to satisfy our immediate needs? Should we aim to re-create forests, or simply create them? How does the past shed light on our environmental efforts, and how does the present influence our environmental goals? Can we predict the future of restoration?

This book explores how a consideration of time and history can improve the practice of restoration. There is a past of restoration, as well as past assumptions about restoration, and such assumptions have political and social implications. Governments around the world are willing to spend billions on restoration projects – in the Everglades, along the Rhine River, in the South China Sea – without acknowledging that former generations have already wrestled with repairing damaged ecosystems, that there have been many kinds of former ecosystems, and that there are many former ways of understanding such systems. This book aims to put the dimension of time back into our understanding of environmental efforts. Historic ecosystems can serve as models for our restorative efforts, if we can just describe such ecosystems. What conditions should be brought back, and do such conditions represent new natures or better pasts? A collective answer is given in these pages – and it is not a unified answer.

Marcus Hall is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Utah. His most recent book, Earth Repair: A Transatlantic History of Environmental Restoration was published by Virginia University Press in 2005. He is winner of the Antoinette Forrester Downing book award, and was awarded a fellowship by the Smithsonian Institute in 2007.