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'Deep' South: Mammoth Cave, Kentucky, and Environmental Knowledge, 1800-1974

机译:“深”南方:肯塔基州猛mm洞和环境知识,1800-1974年

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摘要

Mammoth Cave in Kentucky is the longest known cave in the world. This dissertation examines the history of how scientists and non-scientists alike contributed to a growing body of knowledge about Mammoth Cave and how that knowledge in turn affected land use decisions in the surrounding neighborhood. During the nineteenth century visitors traveled through Mammoth Cave along with their guides, gaining knowledge of the cave by using their senses and spreading that knowledge through travel narratives. After the Civil War, cave guides, now free men who chose to stay in the neighborhood, used the cave as a way to build and support their community. New technologies and new visitors reconstructed the Mammoth Cave experience. Competing knowledge of locals and science-minded individuals, new technologies to spread the cave experience, and a growing tourism industry in America spurred the Kentucky Cave Wars during the late-nineteenth century. In the twentieth century, cutthroat competition between caves crystallized support for a national park at Mammoth Cave. Park promoters met resistance. Cave owners' knowledge of what they owned underground helped them resist condemnation. Those affected by the coming of the national park made their protests known on the landscape, in newspapers, and in courtrooms. The introduction of New Deal workers, primarily the Civilian Conservation Corps, at Mammoth Cave and a skeleton staff of National Park Service officials faced antagonism from the local community. Important discoveries inside Mammoth Cave hastened the park's creation, but not without lingering bitterness that would affect later preservation efforts. The inability of the park promoters to acquire two caves around Mammoth Cave was a failure for the national park campaign but a boon for exploration. The postwar period saw returning veterans and their families swarming national parks. While the parking lots at Mammoth Cave grew crowded and the Park Service attempted to balance preservation and development for the enjoyment of the visiting public, underground explorers were pushing the cave's known extent to new lengths. This new knowledge inspired a new generation of environmentalists and preservationists to use the Wilderness Act to advocate for a cave wilderness designation at Mammoth Cave National Park.
机译:肯塔基州的猛mm洞是世界上已知最长的洞。本文考察了科学家和非科学家如何对猛Ma洞的知识不断增长做出贡献的历史,以及这些知识又如何影响周围社区的土地使用决策。在19世纪,游客们与导游一起穿越了猛mm洞,利用他们的感官获得了对洞窟的知识,并通过旅行记述来传播这些知识。内战结束后,洞穴向导(现在是选择住在附近地区的自由人)将洞穴用作建立和支持社区的一种方式。新技术和新访客重建了猛mm洞的体验。竞争激烈的当地人知识和具有科学头脑的人,传播洞穴经验的新技术以及美国旅游业的蓬勃发展,在19世纪后期激起了肯塔基洞穴战争。在20世纪,洞穴之间的残酷竞争使对猛mm洞国家公园的支持更加明确。公园发起人遇到阻力。洞穴主人对自己在地下拥有的财产的了解有助于他们抵制谴责。受国家公园的到来影响的人们在景观,报纸和法庭上公开抗议。在猛mm洞(Mammoth Cave)引入新政工人,主要是平民保护团,以及国家公园管理局官员的骨干人员,遭到了当地社区的反对。猛mm洞(Mammoth Cave)内的重要发现加快了公园的创作速度,但并非没有持久的苦味,这会影响以后的保存工作。公园发起人无法在猛mm洞附近获得两个洞穴,这是国家公园运动的失败,但却是探索的福音。战后时期,返回的退伍军人及其家人蜂拥至国家公园。当猛mm洞的停车场变得越来越拥挤,公园服务局试图平衡保护和发展以供来访者欣赏时,地下探险者却将洞的知名度推到了新的高度。这一新知识激发了新一代的环保主义者和保护主义者,他们使用《荒野法》来提倡在猛mm洞国家公园(Mammoth Cave National Park)指定一个荒野。

著录项

  • 作者

    Warrick, Alyssa Diane.;

  • 作者单位

    Mississippi State University.;

  • 授予单位 Mississippi State University.;
  • 学科 History.;American history.;Environmental studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2017
  • 页码 336 p.
  • 总页数 336
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:54:21

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