Northern Europe: An Environmental History
By (Author) Tamara L. Whited
By (author) Jens Ivo Engels
By (author) Richard C. Hoffmann
By (author) Hilde Ibsen
By (author) Wybren Verstegen
Edited by Mark R. Stoll
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ABC-CLIO
19th August 2005
United States
General
Non Fiction
History: specific events and topics
333.7094
Hardback
296
Width 178mm, Height 254mm
709g
A fascinating handbook providing a rare synthesis of the environmental history of northern Europe from the Paleolithic era to the present day. The Ice Age...Forest clearance...Imperial expansion and the world's first industrial nations...This volume charts the dramatic environmental changes that helped shape northern Europe and provided the ideal conditions for the birth of industry and the growth of powerful empires. Of interest to students and academics alike, this book provides a much needed synthesis of the recent literature on northern Europe's environmental history. Beginning with the Paleolithic period and the recolonization of Europe after the Ice Age, this book maps out the key environmental trends in the history of the region's environment and its interaction with the human population. The book also highlights how dramatic events outside Europe, such as the Tomboro volcanic eruption in Indonesia in 1815, had dramatic consequences for the region's climate. Of particular interest are the book's sections highlighting how levels of copper and lead production in the Roman Empire were not matched again until the birth of the Industrial Revolution. Given the culturally diverse nature of modern Europe, a vital aspect of the book is its identification of the common themes that unite the interaction of the region's nation-states with the natural environment.
"I highly recommend this book and, on the strength of this book, this series, to the reader who wishes a short, readable, reliable introduction to regional environmental history." - Sixteenth Century Journal
Tamara L. Whited, Ph.D., is associate professor of history and assistant chair of the History Department at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Indiana, PA. Jens I. Engels, Ph.D., is assistant professor in the History Department at Freiburg University, Freiburg, Germany. Richard C. Hoffmann, Ph.D., is professor of history at York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Hilde Ibsen, Ph.D., is senior lecturer in environmental studies in the Department of Nature and Environment at Karlstads University, Karlstads, Sweden. Wybren Verstegen, Ph.D., is lecturer in ecological and economic history at the Free University Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.