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On The Border: An Environmental History Of San Antonio (Pittsburgh Hist Urban Environ)
 
 
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On The Border: An Environmental History Of San Antonio (Pittsburgh Hist Urban Environ) [Hardcover]

Char Miller (Author)

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Book Description

Pittsburgh Hist Urban Environ October 25, 2001

Over the past 300 years, settlement patterns, geography, and climate have greatly affected the ecology of the south Texas landscape. Drawing on a variety of interests and perspectives, the contributors to On the Border probe these evolving relationships in and around San Antonio, the country’s ninth-largest city.

Spanish, Mexican, and American settlers required open expanses of land for agriculture and ranching, displacing indigenous inhabitants. The high poverty traditionally felt by many residents, combined with San Antonio’s environment, has contributed to the development of the city’s unusually complex public health dilemmas. The national drive to preserve historic landmarks and landscapes has been complicated by the blight of homogenous urban sprawl. But no issue has been more contentious than that of water, particularly in a city entirely dependent on a single aquifer in a region of little rain. Managing these environmental concerns is the chief problem facing the city in the new century.


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“Scholars interested in regional, environmental, and urban history will appreciate the book. So will thoughtful residents of San Antonio, if they hope that their city will fare better in the twenty-first century than it did in the last one.”
--American Historical Review

About the Author

Char Miller is professor and chair of the History Department and director of Urban Studies at Trinity University in San Antonio. He is author of "Gifford Pinchot and the Making of Modern Environmentalism," co-author of the award-winning The Greatest Good: 100 Years of Forestry in America, editor of American Forests: Nature, Culture, and Politics, and co-editor of Fluid Arguments: Five Centuries of Western Water Conflict.

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More About the Author

Char Miller, who grew up in Darien, CT, received his BA from Pitzer College, and his MA and Ph.D. from The Johns Hopkins University. For 26 wonderful years, he taught U. S. history and urban studies at Trinity University in San Antonio. Now he directs the Environmental Analysis Program at Pomona College (Claremont CA), where he is the W. M. Keck Professor of Environmental Analysis. Miller has served as Associate Editor of Environmental History and the Journal of Forestry, is a Contributing Writer for the Texas Observer, a Senior Fellow at the Pinchot Institute for Conservation, and writes a column for KCET (Los Angeles), entitled Golden Green, which focuses on environmental issues in California and the west.

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First Sentence:
All he wanted was bait for fishing, but when the young man cracked open a mussel he had pulled up from the shallow waters of the San Antonio River he was startled to "discover a pearl imbedded in the unhappy bivalve." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
unbranded stock, recharge zone, artesian springs
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
San Antonio, Hill Country, Air Force, Conservation Society, East Side, Coastal Plain, West Side, Balcones Escarpment, San Antonians, United States, African Americans, Edwards Plateau, Mexican Americans, Quarry Market, City Hall, North Side, San Marcos, Bexar County, World War, Camp Bullis, City Water Board, Civil War, New Braunfels, Gonzalez Amendment, Good Government League
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