America's Wetland: An Environmental and Cultural History of Tidewater Virginia and North Carolina

Author:   Roy T. Sawyer
Publisher:   University of Virginia Press
ISBN:  

9780813929217


Pages:   10
Publication Date:   05 May 2010
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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America's Wetland: An Environmental and Cultural History of Tidewater Virginia and North Carolina


Overview

The geologically ancient Tidewater region of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina rests precariously atop millions of years of erosion from the nearby Appalachian Mountains. An immense wetland at near sea level, it is host to every conceivable body of fresh water, ranging from brooding swamps and large hidden lakes to sluggish blackwater rivers and brackish sounds (one of which was so large an early explorer thought he had found the Pacific Ocean). In this engaging book, biologist and Tidewater native Roy T. Sawyer delivers an ecohistory of this unique waterland whose wind-driven tides cover a rich human and natural past. Jutting prominently into the Atlantic, this wetland is the final stop for the warmth of the Gulf Stream before it is deflected from the American mainland. At the top of a narrow, warm coastal strip, it provides an ideal home for a vast array of animal and plant life, including prodigious numbers of reptiles (such as the world's northernmost population of alligators) and overwintering waterfowl. It is also home to the oldest known living trees east of the Rocky Mountains. The climate and geography made the area a natural choice for very early human habitation - as far back as the last ice age, when the region was a rich oasis just south of a veritable tundra. In examining the impact of humans upon this environment, and vice versa, Sawyer reveals how our alarming short-sightedness has produced a fragile and endangered present. Although human manipulation started here as early as ten thousand years ago (coinciding with extinction of mammoths and other megafauna), the environment has been altered most radically over only the last one hundred years, particularly in regard to land drainage, deforestation, overfishing, and pollution. The author provides an authoritative overview of the human impact on these wetlands and suggests ways in which we might still salvage them. In so doing, he explores the effects of hurricanes, droughts, forest fires, and ice ages of the past - and anticipates, in this age of global warming, natural events that may be still to come.

Full Product Details

Author:   Roy T. Sawyer
Publisher:   University of Virginia Press
Imprint:   University of Virginia Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.541kg
ISBN:  

9780813929217


ISBN 10:   0813929210
Pages:   10
Publication Date:   05 May 2010
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

Table of Contents

Reviews

The environmental and cultural fortunes of the tidewater regions of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina are inextricably linked by the adjacencies of each state's importantwetlands...there's an intriguing back-story attached to almost every square mile of the tidewater involving alligators, hurricanes, civil war blockades, underground railroads, peat fires, earthquakes, dams, dugouts, shipwrecked hogs, and importantly, the environmental imprinthumans have left over thousands of years...If you've fished for crappie in LakeDrummond, explored the natural riches of Back Bay and the Great Dismal Swamp, hunted waterfowl, or dangled a chicken neck off a backyard pier to net a blue crab, you'll find your next adventure enriched by Sawyer's wide-ranging regional his-tory of one of our nation's most precious ecosystems. --Beth Hester Virginia Wildlife


"The environmental and cultural fortunes of the tidewater regions of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina are inextricably linked by the adjacencies of each state's importantwetlands...there's an intriguing back-story attached to almost every square mile of the tidewater involving alligators, hurricanes, civil war blockades, underground railroads, peat fires, earthquakes, dams, dugouts, shipwrecked hogs, and importantly, the environmental imprinthumans have left over thousands of years...If you've fished for crappie in LakeDrummond, explored the natural riches of Back Bay and the Great Dismal Swamp, hunted waterfowl, or dangled a chicken neck off a backyard pier to net a blue crab, you'll find your next adventure enriched by Sawyer's wide-ranging regional his-tory of one of our nation's most precious ecosystems. --Beth Hester ""Virginia Wildlife Magazine"""


Author Information

Roy T. Sawyer is retired Managing Director of BIOPHARM (UK) Ltd., a leech research institute in Wales. He is also founder and curator of the Medical Leech Museum, a private facility in Charleston, South Carolina, and the author of Leech Biology and Behaviour.

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Latest Reading Guide

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