List of Figures. Acknowledgments.
Introduction.
The Nature of World History.
The Nature of World Environmental History.
Earth History and Human Origins.
Population Growth and the Rise of Cities.
Cities and the Rise of Manufacturing and Industry.
World Trade and New World Ecology.
Fossil Fuels and Climate Change.
1. An Evolving Earth.
Introduction.
The Origin of the Earth: From Hot to Cold Planet.
Icehouse Planet/Greenhouse Planet.
Plate Tectonics, Super-Continents, and Climate Change.
The Warming.
The Cooling.
The Elevation of the Tibetan Plateau and Its Effect on the Global
Climate.
The Birth, Death, and Rebirth of the Mediterranean Sea and its
Hemispheric Environmental Effects.
The Impact of the Isthmus of Panama on Global Climate Change.
The Mid-Pliocene, Glacial and Interglacial Cycles, and "Modern"
Times.
2. Evolving Humanity.
Introduction.
Climatic Changes and Evolution.
Another Effect of the Closing of the Mediterranean Sea.
Human Ancestry.
The Birth of Human Intelligence.
Translating Human Intelligence into Action.
Population Migration and Expansion.
Homo neanderthalensis vs. Homo sapiens.
Early Diets and Their Nutritional Value.
The Broad Spectrum ? an Economic Revolution.
3. Foraging, Cultivating, and Food Production.
Introduction.
Early Farming and a Warming Climate.
Settlement and Domestication.
Early Agricultural Communities.
Early Agriculture in China.
Early Agriculture in Africa.
Early Agriculture in Mesoamerica.
Early Agriculture in Europe.
World Agriculture During the Age of Manufacture and Industry.
The Green Revolution.
4. Populating the Earth: Diet, Domestication, and Disease.
Introduction.
A Modern Demographic Scenario.
The Role of Disease in Calculating Population Size.
The Impact of Migration and Settlement on Global Population
Growth.
The Role of Nutrition on Early population Growth.
The Role of Animal Domestication in the Spread of Infectious
Disease.
Nutrition, Climate Change and Population.
A Population Bomb or Not?
5. The Making of an Urban World.
Introduction.
What Does Urban Mean?
Early Urbanization and Its Environmental Effects.
Ancient Urbanization.
The Origin of Writing.
The Impact of Changing Rivers on Environmental Quality.
Urbanization in the Indus Valley.
China?s Early Cities.
Ancient Mesoamerican Cities.
Early European Cities.
6. Mining, Making, and Manufacturing.
Introduction.
The Age of Copper and Bronze.
The Effects of Ancient Mining on Human Health and the
Environment.
Mining in the Roman World.
The Age of Iron.
Iron Making in China and India.
Iron Making in pre-Modern Europe.
Manufacturing in Colonial America.
7. Industrial Work.
Introduction.
China and India?s Economy.
European Hegemony and British Industrialization.
Economic Development in China, Japan, and India.
Harnessing the Power of Water.
Disease, Death and a Public Health Response.
The Power of Steam.
The Role of Invention and Innovation.
Comparing Industrialization in the United States and in
Britain.
Coal, Iron, and Steel.
Industrial Transformation and Global Auto Mobility.
8. Trade and Consumption.
Introduction.
Global Trading Networks.
Distancing Consumers from Producers.
Material Goods.
Luxury Foods Become Commodities.
Tobacco.
Sugar.
Coffee and Tea.
Environmental Effects of Increased Cultivation of Coffee.
Conspicuous Consumption.
Global Consumption.
The Automobile and Electronics in Emerging Markets.
9. Fossil Fuels, Wind, Water, Nuclear and Solar Energy.
Introduction.
The Eotechnic World: Waterwheels and Windmills.
The Paleotechnic World: Energy from Coal.
The Neotechnic World: Energy from Oil.
The Developing World?s Demands for Energy.
The Case for Natural Gas: A Neotechnic Energy Solution.
The Case for Nuclear Energy: Another Neotechnic Solution.
The Case for Renewable Wind and Solar Power: A Return to the
Eotechnic.
10. A Warming Climate.
Introduction.
The Rise and Fall of the Mayan Civilization.
The Medieval Warm Period (1000?1300 ce) and the Little Ice Age
(1300?1850 ce).
Current Global Climate Conditions.
The Role of Solar Energy.
The Role of the Atlantic Circulation Energy Exchange.
The Role of Fossil Fuel Emissions.
What Is to be Done?
Epilogue.
Notes.
Index.
Anthony N. Penna has taught at Carnegie-Mellon University and Northeastern University, where he has been teaching North American and Global Environmental history courses since 1990. He is the author of Nature s Bounty: Historical and Modern Environmental Perspectives (1999), and he is co-editor of Remaking Boston: An Environmental History of the City and Its Surroundings (2009).
"The Human Footprint adds to the growing literature combining
environmental with world history, both of which are relatively
recent and vibrant subfields of history . . . His topical approach
does result in an interesting, readable, and accessible set of
histories that addresses issues of concern not just to world and
environmental historian, but to geologists and evolutionary
biologists as well, making it quite suitable for use in a range of
college and university courses." (Technology and Culture, 1 January
2011)
"I highly recommend this book as one that would work extremely well
in an environmental history offering or as a supplementary work in
any World survey." (World History Association, 1 October 2010)
"An increasing number of scholar-teachers are now able to teach
global survey courses, giving students an improved context for
heading into a future of daunting climate change. None of the
recent survey volumes is better tailored for this audience (or for
a wider and equally anxious public) than Penna's Human Footprint,
the fruit of two decades of teaching this subject at Northeastern
University...One virtue of Penna's approach is its integration of
hard sciences (archeology, climatology, epidemiology, etc.) with
social and historical concepts...Penna makes clear how natural
settings shaped early human cultures; this enables readers then to
watch the long human effort to turn the tables on Nature, reshaping
it to this species' innovative priorities." (Environmental History,
2011)
"An ambitious and timely book that builds on and extends a vital
field of historical research. Key attractions include the
compatibility with the organization of teaching in many world
history courses and the embrace not only of big changes like the
advent of agriculture or industrialization, but less familiar
developments such as the environmental impact of migration
patterns. The result is a real sense of how humans have interacted
with nature and the ways current environmental issues connect to
the past."
?Peter N. Stearns, George Mason University, author of The
Industrial Revolution in World History "Penna is to be
congratulated for producing one of the first environmental
histories to embrace the entire world and all of human history. As
our relationship with the world?s diverse environments
deteriorates, such educational resources are becoming increasingly
vital."
?David Christian,Macquarie University, formerly of SDSU, author of
Maps of Time: An Introduction to Big History
"An insightful survey of global history . . . In clear and
accessible prose, it provides a masterful synthesis of scholarship
across a wide range of disciplines. Its breadth and sophistication
? and its relevance to the world today ? make it a compelling
read.
?Jeffrey K. Stine, Curator of Engineering and Environmental
History, Smithsonian Institution, author of America's Forested
Wetlands: From Wasteland to Valued Resource
"Penna weaves human and natural history together into a single,
compelling story. In his vision, human innovation, culture and
exchange, nutrition, atmospheric chemistry, and plate tectonics are
just a few of the many processes that come together in an endless
dance of engagement and change . . . The pasts and the fates of
humanity, nature, and the Earth are one and the same."
?Adam McKeown, Columbia University, author of Melancholy Order:
Asian Migration and the Globalization of Borders 1834?1929
"Combining wide knowledge with an eye for the essential, Penna
takes a truly vast and challenging subject ? the natural and human
history of the earth ? and distills it into a volume that is
reliable, accessible, and illuminating."
?William B. Meyer, Colgate University, author of Human Impact on
the Earth
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