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Historical Overview of the Modern Environmental Movement

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Title: Historical Overview of the Modern Environmental Movement


1
Historical Overview of the Modern Environmental
Movement
2
In the beginning
  • 10,000 years ago the human population began to
    rise after the Neolithic Agricultural Revolution.
  • Humans settled to become farmers instead of local
    hunter-gatherers.
  • This meant managing local resources (food, water,
    fuel) sustainably around the settlement

3
Industrial Revolution
  • Began in the early 1800s
  • Produced goods and services for nearly all, but
    demanded the burning of large amounts of trees
    and coal.
  • Required large-scale mining.
  • Land was cleared, natural waterways were
    polluted, cities became crowded and smoky.

4
James Fenimore Cooper
  • 1820s
  • Wrote Last of the Mohicans, The Pioneers, and The
    Prairie.
  • Natural resources are not infinite.
  • Nature must be preserved for future generations.
  • Pollution and other activities endanger life on
    Earth.

5
Ralph Waldo Emersonand Henry David Thoreau
  • Wrote about a reverence for the natural world.
  • Described an almost mystical experience.
  • Transcendentalists.
  • Not scientists.

6
1900-1960Environmental Awareness Grows
7
Theodore Roosevelt
  • U.S. President 1901-9
  • Instrumental in founding the U.S. Forest Service
    and National Parks.
  • Believed the health of the nation depended upon
    the health of the land.

8
John Muir
  • Perhaps the first preservationist.
  • Believed that nature for be preserved for its own
    sake, not to provide resources for humans.
  • Said nature is a mirror reflecting the Creator.
  • Founded the Sierra Club in 1892.
  • Fought for the preservation of Yosemite National
    Park.

9
Roosevelt and Muir in Yosemite 1903
10
Gifford Pinchot
  • A conservationist.
  • Believed that forests should be used both to
    conserve the environment and to provide resources
    for humans.
  • Muir and Pinchot disagreed over the Hetch Hetchy
    Dam project.

11
William Hornaby
  • 1913 wrote the influential book, Our Vanishing
    Wildlife.
  • 1914 Martha, the last passenger pigeon, died in
    the Cincinnati Zoo.

12
The Dust Bowl
  • In the 1930s, in the grass plains of North
    America.
  • Drought and winds turned the farms into dust and
    ruined agriculture.
  • Likely caused by a combination of poor farming
    practices and a severe drought.

13
The Green Revolution
  • 1940s 1960s
  • Modern agriculture boosted food production
    significantly.
  • Required machinery and tremendous amounts of
    fossil fuel.
  • New crops varieties were developed and fertilizer
    and pesticide use rose sharply.
  • World population grew to about 3 billion.

14
Aldo Leopold
  • Wrote A Sand County Almanac in 1949.
  • Widely considered the most important
    environmental book ever written.
  • Argues that we have an ethical responsibility to
    be good stewards of the land.

15
1960sModern Environmental Movement Gains
Momentum in U.S.
16
Rachel Carson
  • Wrote Silent Spring.
  • Warned of the effects of pesticides.
  • As a result, DDT was banned.
  • May have been a mistake, as DDT is an effective
    means to prevent malaria.

17
1970s
  • The movement goes global.
  • A number of prominent NGOs (private
    organizations) were formed.
  • Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace were both
    established in 1971.
  • The first UN Earth Summit was held in Stockholm,
    Sweden in 1972.
  • CITES Treaty 1975
  • Many controversial environmental ideas were
    explored.

18
1980s
  • 1984 Union Carbide pesticide plant released 40
    tonnes of methyl isocyanate gas, immediately
    killing nearly 3,000 and ultimately killing
    15,000 people.
  • 1986 Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine
    exploded. 4,000 immediate deaths, estimated
    30,000 deaths ultimately.

19
1980s
  • 1987 Montreal Protocol was signed, requiring
    nations to reduce CFC emissions.
  • 1988 UN forms the Intergovernmental Panel on
    Climate Change (IPCC).
  • 1989 Exxon Valdez runs aground and spills 10.8
    million gallons of crude oil into Alaskas
    Prudhoe Bay.

20
1990s
  • 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
  • Focused on global warming and global economics.
  • Green awareness became widespread in developed
    nations.
  • Captain Planet and the Planeteers.
  • Green Party gains power in Europe.
  • Ecotourism thrives.

21
2000s
  • 2002 Earth Summit in Johannesburg, South Africa
    was largest to date.
  • Focused on 5 areas
  • Water and sanitation
  • Energy
  • Health
  • Agriculture
  • Biodiversity
  • Kyoto Protocol became a legal requirement in 2005.
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