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Academic & Professional Books  History & Other Humanities  Environmental History

Living with Lead An Environmental History of Idaho's Coeur D'Alenes, 1885-2011

Living with Lead
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  • Living with Lead ISBN: 9780822964483 Paperback Apr 2017 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 1-2 months
    £40.99
    #243168
Price: £40.99
About this book Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

The Coeur d'Alenes, a twenty-five by ten mile portion of the Idaho Panhandle, is home to one of the most productive mining districts in world history. Historically the globe's richest silver district and also one of the nation's biggest lead and zinc producers, the Coeur d'Alenes' legacy also includes environmental pollution on an epic scale. For decades local waters were fouled with tailings from the mining district's more than one hundred mines and mills and the air surrounding Kellogg, Idaho was laced with lead and other toxic heavy metals issuing from the Bunker Hill Company's smelter. The same industrial processes that damaged the environment and harmed human health, however, also provided economic sustenance to thousands of local residents and a string of proud, working-class communities. Living with Lead endeavors to untangle the costs and benefits of a century of mining, milling, and smelting in a small western city and the region that surrounds it.

Customer Reviews

Biography

Bradley D. Snow is assistant teaching professor at Montana State University.

By: Bradley D Snow(Author)
272 pages, 20 b/w photos
Media reviews

"In Living with Lead, Bradley Snow takes us through a harrowing history of humanity's relationship with one of the most poisonous metals ever to see wide use in the modern age. Tracing the dramatic story of one small Northern Rocky Mountain smelter town, Snow reveals how the things we often dismissively term 'raw materials' sometimes control us more than we control them."
– Timothy James LeCain, Montana State University

"The history of Kellogg, Bunker Hill, and Idaho's Coeur d'Alenes is a powerful and illustrative example of a broader story: the transformation of one town from classic industrial modernity – which paired technological and economic progress with vast and inherent risk – to advanced modernity in which human communities shifted their understanding of risk and benefit to critique industrial production. Bradley Snow presents a case study of the trifecta of American modernity – which allows us to understand modernity at a deep and meaningful level."
– Kathryn Morse, Middlebury College

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