The River Returns
January 29, 2010 on 10:17 am | In Uncategorized | Comments OffMcGill-Queen’s Press has kindly provided a discount form for my latest book, co-authored with Christopher Armstrong and H.V. Nelles, The River Returns: An Environmental History of the Bow
Here is the hyper-link:river-returns-discount-flyer
Happy Reading!
Walking on water
January 28, 2010 on 1:41 pm | In Uncategorized | Comments OffAnd now for something completely different… An article by Paul Collins in the 03 January 2010 issue of the New Scientist is worth a look if you believed, as I did, that the idea of walking on water, however inspiring and intriguing, was the proper subject of mythology rather than historical analysis. I was wrong. There is a long history of water walking technologies, which have equipped the daring with floatable duck feet, from Leonardo Da Vinci (self-portrait above) to adventure crazed campers. Depending on your ambitions, the online story includes a short video, ‘how to walk on water’.
Digital photograph and postcard collections
November 9, 2009 on 10:53 am | In Uncategorized | Comments OffThis photograph of the central spill and fishway of the Rock Island dam in 1940 shows the first mainstem dam on the Columbia River. It is just one of a group of photographs recently released by the Oregon State University Archives on flickr. This release is the tip of the ice(water?)berg. Have a look at the Western Waters Digital Collection to see how one archives is making its unique collection available for public view.
On a smaller scale, Beau Freeman, a Senior Water Resources Engineer at California Polytechnic State University has created a website displaying his private collection of irrigation postcards, irrigation technik. I happened upon several that depicted the CPR projects in southern Alberta.
New Media and the environmental history of the Columbia River
October 14, 2009 on 2:38 pm | In Uncategorized | Comments OffEnvironmental historians interested in the possibilities of new media for reaching public audiences might wish to visit Joy Parr’s megaprojects website, which contains several new folders of material, prepared by Jon Van der Veen on the Arrow Lakes. This work will accompany Parr’s forthcoming book, Sensing Changes: Technology, Environment and the Everyday, to be released by UBC Press in December. A different attempt to present the history of dams in the region may be found in a virtual museum of Canada exhibit, The Balance of Power: Hydroelectric Development in Southeastern British Columbia.
The Industrialization of Rivers
September 17, 2009 on 3:31 pm | In Uncategorized, water history | Comments Off24- 26 Sept, 2009: How have rivers been put to work? What technologies have transformed their flow regimes? In what ways do rivers serve as the sanitary systems of cities? These are some of the questions which frame and upcoming conference on the comparative industrialization of rivers organized by Stephane Castonguay and supported by the water history project and a grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada . The conference addresses particular cases in North America and Europe and will build a broad comparative perspective. Bringing together invited participants from North America and Europe, the conference will travel to meeting sites and field locations in Montreal, Trois-Rivières and Shawinigan as well as places in-between.

WATERLIFE this week
July 14, 2009 on 3:32 pm | In Uncategorized | Comments OffWaterlife, a new film about water in the Great Lakes will screen this Friday in Vancouver (details below). The film has received a strong reception to date, and this screening will include a talk-back session led by Fin Donnelly of the Rivershed Society of BC.
**Recommended.
The film is produced by Primitive Entertainment (Kristina McLaughlin and
Michael McMahon) in co-production with the National Film Board of Canada
(Gerry Flahive). One of its executive producers is Mark Achbar (The
Corporation). Waterlife is being released in Canada by Mongrel Media.
Opens Friday, July 17 at Tinseltown
12:45PM 4:25PM 7:35PM 10:10PM daily
Special Event - July 18:
Join Fin Donnelly of the Rivershed Society of BC and a representative from
the Council of Canadians for a discussion of local water issues following
the 12:45PM screening on Saturday, July 18th at Tinseltown.
Site C forum published
June 1, 2009 on 2:34 pm | In Uncategorized | Comments OffThe future of BC energy policy turns to a considerable extent on the possibility of further hydro development on the Peace River at Site C. For decades Site C has been a controversial flash point amongst Peace Valley residents, environmentalists and politicians. In November 2008, the Canadian Water History Project organized a special workshop on the proposed dam, its history and its possible effects. The meeting brought together representatives of First Nations communities and environmental organizations in the Peace region with academics from BC and elsewhere who study electricity, water history and public policy. At the end of the meeting, participants were invited to submit op-eds for a special forum section of the journal, BC Studies. That forum has just been published in the Spring 2009 issue. Although only the paper version is available, electronic versions of the op-eds should soon be made available on the BC Studies website.
A field course on the Bow River
May 29, 2009 on 6:36 pm | In Uncategorized | Comments Off
It’s difficult to teach students about water history, especially when they are unfamiliar with the rivers or lakes you discuss. One way to get over this problem is to bring the students and the rivers together. This past week I co-led a human geography field school on the environmental history of the Bow River with my colleague, Graeme Wynn. We were based in the Barrier Lake field station in the Kananaskis Valley and visited sites from Banff National Park through Canmore, Calgary and the lower basin. We examined river parks and irrigation canals, flood structures and hydro dams. There seems to be no better way to explain the cause and effect relationships of different water infrastructure than to visit them, and just as importantly, talk to people whose lives they touch. A field course takes a lot of work to organize but I recommend the model. I learned a great deal from my students’ questions and they gained a new appreciation of the difficulties of living with a river.
Here is a photo of the Bassano Dam taken by one of the students, Danny Wong.
A new journal
April 29, 2009 on 1:22 pm | In Uncategorized | Comments Off
Have you heard? A new journal on Water History will be published by Springer and co-edited by Maurits W. Ertsen, Department of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Delft University of Technology, Heather J. Hoag, History, University of San Francisco, and Johann Tempelhoff, School of Basic Sciences Faculty, North West University, SOuth Africa. The editors are now accepting submissions. Let’s wish this venture well!
Upcoming conferences
March 25, 2009 on 3:47 pm | In Uncategorized | 1 Comment
The programs have now been released for two upcoming conferences that will contain substantial water history contributions. Our Living Rivers Conference in Ottawa, June 14-17, sponsored by Heritage Rivers Canada contains many papers bridging public history, academic work and government research. The World Congress of Environmental History in Copenhagen, August 4-8, to which the International Water History Association, the Network in Canadian History and Environment and the American Society for Environmental History will all contribute as participating organizations, will contain a range of water history papers from around the world.
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