Exercise #1: Local Environmental History
Instructions
For Exercise #1, you will bring environmental concepts home by looking at your neighbourhood’s environmental history.
- Using the submission form, post a photo of your area (Google Street View if you do not want to show your home) on this interactive map and explain the ecological history of this space, as per this example.
- Write a 700 to 1100 word of the ecological history of this physical environment, including where applicable: pre-contact use and settlement; wildlife past and present; early settlement and resource extraction; invasive species; urban development; stewardship actions (urban stormwater retention systems; community gardens; composting facilities).
- You must show where you found your information, either through footnote citations or with links embedded in the text, or a combination of both.
- The writing can be informal, as per the Exercise 1 Sample (you may even use first person, which definitely will not fly with your historiography and major essay projects!) but correct spelling and grammar are expected.
- In most cases, given the readily available information online, this exercise need not take more than 6–8 hours to complete. It is meant to help you think historically about your environment—to read it through an ecological lens. If you live in a rural area or small town, you may think that there is less to say than what you read in the sample based on a Vancouver neighbourhood, but this is not the case. The environmental history will be very different, and you might focus far more on, say, the settlement period of the late nineteenth century, or the implications of the introduction of cattle or irrigation and less on events of the 1960s and 70s.
- Please note, you should write and edit your submission in a separate file then copy and paste it into the submission box. Once submitted to the HIST 3991 trubox site, you will not be able to edit your post.
Are you a student of HIST 3991? Click here to add a submission to this assignment.
Submissions
Latest Posts
Local Environmental History
November 8, 2023 By: QING WANG
Exploring the Ecological History of My Neighborhood in Richmond, Vancouver The place where I live is Richmond, a cosmopolitan and energetic neighborhood of Vancouver, British Columbia. I live in an area in southern Richmond that has a rich biological history that spans several centuries. My topic of discussion will be my neighborhood’s natural history and the changes that have taken place there over the years. There has been extensive environmental change in Richmond over thousands of years, much like in many other places in British Columbia. The Coast Salish and Sto: lo Nations were the native inhabitants of this area…
Local Environmental History
November 8, 2023 By: QING WANG
Exploring the Ecological History of My Neighborhood in Richmond, Vancouver The place where I live is Richmond, a cosmopolitan and energetic neighborhood of Vancouver, British Columbia. I live in an area in southern Richmond that has a rich biological history that spans several centuries. My topic of discussion will be my neighborhood’s natural history and the changes that have taken place there over the years. There has been extensive environmental change in Richmond over thousands of years, much like in many other places in British Columbia. The Coast Salish and Sto: lo Nations were the native inhabitants of this area…
Kamloops British Columbia
October 26, 2023 By: Kelsey Kozak
I live in Kamloops, British Columbia, in the neighborhood of Brocklehurst. Kamloops is the Anglicized version of the word “Tk’emlúps” from the native language of Secwépemc First Nation. The meaning is the “meeting of two rivers”, which are the North and South Thompson Rivers that feed Kamloops Lake to the west of the City. Kamloops is semi-arid desert and has very distinctive native plants and animals. From the City of Kamloops website (1) I learned the area was originally inhabited by the Secwépemc and Nlaka’pamux peoples and they have lived here for approximately 10,000 years . From the Tk’emlúps website…