Environmental History of New England

Richard W. Judd
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Abstract

New England’s first human inhabitants arrived around 12,000 years ago and adopted a nomadic life in response to a rapidly changing postglacial environment. They were followed by Archaic and Woodland cultures, the latter innovating a form of corn-beans-squash cultivation called “three sisters.” European colonists appeared first in small fishing and fur-trading posts and then in larger numbers at Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay. The nascent fur-trading farming, fishing, and logging economies disrupted regional ecosystems. Colonization weakened Native society through epidemics, ecological disruptions, enslavement, and wars, and yet Indigenous people persevered in family bands and small communities and sustained their identity through extended kinship ties. English husbandry shifted gradually to market production after the American Revolution, which brought further ecological disruptions. The early 19th century saw the rise of equally intrusive fishing and logging practices, which were exaggerated at century’s end by the introduction of pulp and paper production, marine engines, and new trawling equipment. New England’s Industrial Revolution began in the 1790s in the Blackstone Valley and spread from there into central New England, where more forceful rivers gave rise to gigantic textile mills. The cultural disorientation brought on by industrialization triggered the Romantic movement, epitomized by Transcendentalist discourse on the truths intuited through the contemplation of nature. The Romantic recasting of nature provided intellectual impetus for pioneering fisheries- and forest-conservation efforts. In cities, conservation brought, among other things, landscaped parks such as Boston’s Emerald Necklace. Mirroring its approach to conservation, New England pioneered several forms of environmental activism, including private land trusts, cultural landscape preservation, heritage parks, and environmental justice movements. New England “re-wilded” several of its rivers by removing dams to renew migratory fish runs.
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新英格兰环境史
新英格兰的第一批人类居民大约在12000年前到达,为了适应快速变化的冰川后环境,他们开始了游牧生活。紧随其后的是古代文化和林地文化,后者创新了一种被称为“三姐妹”的玉米-豆类-南瓜种植形式。欧洲殖民者首先出现在小渔场和毛皮贸易站,然后大量出现在普利茅斯和马萨诸塞湾。新兴的毛皮贸易农业、渔业和伐木经济破坏了区域生态系统。殖民化通过流行病、生态破坏、奴役和战争削弱了土著社会,但土著人民坚持在家庭团体和小社区中生活,并通过扩大的亲属关系维持自己的身份。美国独立战争后,英国畜牧业逐渐转向市场生产,这进一步破坏了生态。19世纪初,同样具有侵入性的捕鱼和伐木活动兴起,到世纪末,由于纸浆和造纸、船用发动机和新型拖网捕鱼设备的引入,这些活动被夸大了。新英格兰的工业革命始于18世纪90年代的黑石谷,并从那里蔓延到新英格兰中部,在那里更湍猛的河流催生了巨大的纺织厂。工业化带来的文化迷失引发了浪漫主义运动,体现在通过对自然的沉思直觉真理的先验主义话语中。对自然的浪漫重塑为开创性的渔业和森林保护工作提供了智力上的推动力。在城市里,保护带来了景观公园,比如波士顿的祖母绿项链。新英格兰开创了几种形式的环境行动主义,包括私人土地信托、文化景观保护、遗产公园和环境正义运动,反映了它的保护方法。新英格兰通过拆除水坝来恢复洄游鱼类的洄游,使几条河流“重新野生化”。
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