The Source: How Rivers Made America and America Remade Its Rivers

The Source: How Rivers Made America and America Remade Its Rivers

by Martin Doyle
The Source: How Rivers Made America and America Remade Its Rivers

The Source: How Rivers Made America and America Remade Its Rivers

by Martin Doyle

Hardcover

$26.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

An Amazon Best Book of the Year

How rivers have shaped American politics, economics, and society from the beginnings of the Republic to today.

America has more than 250,000 rivers, coursing over more than 3 million miles, connecting the disparate regions of the United States. On a map they can look like the veins, arteries, and capillaries of a continent-wide circulatory system, and in a way they are. Over the course of this nation’s history rivers have served as integral trade routes, borders, passageways, sewers, and sinks. Over the years, based on our shifting needs and values, we have harnessed their power with waterwheels and dams, straightened them for ships, drained them with irrigation canals, set them on fire, and even attempted to restore them.

In this fresh and powerful work of environmental history, Martin Doyle tells the epic story of America and its rivers, from the U.S. Constitution’s roots in interstate river navigation, the origins of the Army Corps of Engineers, the discovery of gold in 1848, and the construction of the Hoover Dam and the TVA during the New Deal, to the failure of the levees in Hurricane Katrina and the water wars in the west. Along the way, he explores how rivers have often been the source of arguments at the heart of the American experiment—over federalism, sovereignty and property rights, taxation, regulation, conservation, and development.

Through his encounters with experts all over the country—a Mississippi River tugboat captain, an Erie Canal lock operator, a dendrochronologist who can predict the future based on the story trees tell about the past, a western rancher fighting for water rights—Doyle reveals the central role rivers have played in American history—and how vital they are to its future.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780393242355
Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
Publication date: 02/06/2018
Pages: 352
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.50(d)

About the Author

Martin Doyle is director of the Water Policy Program at the Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions and a professor of river science and policy at Duke University’s Nicholas School of the Environment. He lives in North Carolina.

Table of Contents

Introduction 9

Part 1 Federalism

Chapter 1 Navigating the Republic 17

Chapter 2 Life on the Mississippi 43

Chapter 3 The Rise of the Levees 59

Chapter 4 Flood Control 78

Part 2 Sovereignty and Property

Chapter 5 Water Wars 115

Chapter 6 A New Water Market 140

Part 3 Taxation

Chapter 7 Running Water 159

Chapter 8 Burning Rivers 185

Part 4 Regulation

Chapter 9 Regulating Power 219

Chapter 10 The Power of a River 230

Part 5 Conservation

Chapter 11 Channelization 257

Chapter 12 The Restoration Economy 283

Acknowledgments 307

Illustration Credits 311

Notes 313

Index 335

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews