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Tapping Environmental History to Recreate America’s Colonial Hydrology
Author(s) -
Christopher L. Pastore,
Mark B. Green,
Daniel J. Bain,
A. Munoz-Hernandez,
C. J. Vörösmarty,
Jennifer Arrigo,
Sara L. Brandt,
J. M. Duncan,
Francesca Greco,
Hyojin Kim,
Sanjiv Kumar,
Michael Lally,
Anthony J. Parolari,
B. A. Pellerin,
Nira L. Salant,
Adam Schlosser,
Kate Zalzal
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
environmental science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.851
H-Index - 397
eISSN - 1520-5851
pISSN - 0013-936X
DOI - 10.1021/es102672c
Subject(s) - prologue , environmental history , historical record , narrative , history , hydrology (agriculture) , archaeology , engineering , art , art history , literature , geotechnical engineering , memoir , economic history
To properly remediate, improve, or predict how hydrological systems behave, it is vital to establish their histories. However, modern-style records, assembled from instrumental data and remote sensing platforms, hardly exist back more than a few decades. As centuries of data is preferable given multidecadal fluxes of both meteorology/climatology and demographics, building such a history requires resources traditionally considered only useful in the social sciences and humanities. In this Feature, Pastore et al. discuss how they have undertaken the synthesis of historical records and modern techniques to understand the hydrology of the Northeastern U.S. from Colonial times to modern day. Such approaches could aid studies in other regions that may require heavier reliance on qualitative narratives. Further, a better insight as to how historical changes unfolded could provide a “past is prologue” methodology to increase the accuracy of predictive environmental models.

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