Mount Mitchell and the Black Mountains

An Environmental History of the Highest Peaks in Eastern America

Timothy Silver

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The University of North Carolina Press img Link Publisher

Ratgeber / Sammeln, Sammlerkataloge

Beschreibung

Each year, thousands of tourists visit Mount Mitchell, the most prominent feature of North Carolina's Black Mountain range and the highest peak in the eastern United States. From Native Americans and early explorers to land speculators and conservationists, people have long been drawn to this rugged region. Timothy Silver explores the long and complicated history of the Black Mountains, drawing on both the historical record and his experience as a backpacker and fly fisherman. He chronicles the geological and environmental forces that created this intriguing landscape, then traces its history of environmental change and human intervention from the days of Indian-European contact to today.

Among the many tales Silver recounts is that of Elisha Mitchell, the renowned geologist and University of North Carolina professor for whom Mount Mitchell is named, who fell to his death there in 1857. But nature's stories--of forest fires, chestnut blight, competition among plants and animals, insect invasions, and, most recently, airborne toxins and acid rain--are also part of Silver's narrative, making it the first history of the Appalachians in which the natural world gets equal time with human history. It is only by understanding the dynamic between these two forces, Silver says, that we can begin to protect the Black Mountains for future generations.

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Schlagwörter

Mount Mitchell, Blue Ridge Parkway, automobile tourism, Andre Michaux, Big Tom Wilson, environmental history, flyfishing, Locke Craig, Hernando de Soto, balsam woolly adelgid, camping, acid deposition, forestry, Pisgah culture, forest history, Cherokees, John Simcox Holmes, spruce-fir forests, Elisha Mitchell, southern Appalachians, backpacking, natural history of North Carolina, Mount Mitchell State Park, Thomas Clingman, Mount Mitchell Game Refuge, hiking, Black Mountains