Three years after Roger Kennedy retired as director of the National Park Service, from his Santa Fe home he watched as the Cerro Grande Fire moved across the Pajarito Plateau and into Los Alamos. Two hundred and thirty-five homes were destroyed, more than 45,000 acres of forest were burned, and the nation's nuclear laboratories were threatened; even before the embers had died a blame game erupted. Kennedy's career as a public servant, which encompasses appointments under five presidential administrations, convinced him that the tragedy would produce scapegoats and misinformation, and leave American lives at risk. That was unacceptable, even unforgivable. Wildfire and Americans is a passionate, deeply informed appeal that we acknowledge wildfire not as a fire problem but as a people problem. Americans are in the wrong places, damningly because they were encouraged to settle there. Politicians, scientists, and CEOs acting out of patriotism, hubris, and greed have placed their fellow countrymen in harm's way. And now, with global warming, we inhabit a landscape that has become much more dangerous. Grounded in the conviction that we owe a duty to our environment and our fellow man, Wildfire and Americans is more than a depiction of policies gone terribly awry. It is a plea to acknowledge the mercy we owe nature and mankind.
See also fire as fertilizer; fire practices, agriculture; shifting cultivation; swidden Smith, Capt. John, 74 Smith, Glenn, 372 Smith, William, 336 smoke, 338–339; as pollutant, 18, 122, 304, 335, 337, 342–343, 410, 506, 528; ...
In this book, you'll find out about: how and why wildfires happen how different groups, from Native Americans to colonists, from conservationists to modern industrialists, have managed forests and fire the biggest wildfires in American ...
"Between Two Fires relates the play-by-play of the fire revolution and its aftermath"--Provided by publisher.
The works gathered in Wildfire not only explore the sensory and aesthetic aspects of fire, but also highlight how much attitudes have changed over the past 200 years.
Pearson , G. A. 1920. “ Factors Controlling the Distribution of Forest Types . " Ecology 1 : 139-59 . 392. Pearson , G. A. 1936. “ Why the Prairies Are Treeless . " JF 34 : 405-8 . 393. Pechanec , J. F. , G. D. Pickford , and G. Stewart ...
In Scorched Earth, Barker, an environmental reporter who was on the ground and in the smoke during the 1988 fires, shows us that many of today's arguments over fire and the nature of public land began to take shape soon after the Civil War.
“When opportunity afforded,” wrote Captain George F. Brown of Engine Company No. 2, his men “got an hour or two of rest in the doorways and in the streets alongside their apparatus, and the little they had to eat during these fifty ...
This perspective allows a unique view of the development of an industrial society not just from the ground up but from the hearth up.
A history of American wildfires recounts the most significant fires, sharing front-line stories, past and present firefighting strategies, and the apparent increase in fire occurrence and intensity in recent years.
This is a book that needs to be read.”—Eric Perramond, Associate Professor of Environmental Science and Southwest Studies at Colorado College “Flame and Fortune in the American West is a well-researched, provocative, timely, and ...