Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 2 OF 7

Main Title Living waters : reading the rivers of the lower Great Lakes /
Author Wooster, Margaret.
Publisher Excelsior Editions/State University of New York Press,
Year Published 2009
OCLC Number 226389287
ISBN 9780791477038; 0791477037; 9780791477045; 0791477045
Subjects Great Lakes Region (North America)--Environmental conditions ; Water-supply--Great Lakes Region (North America) ; Ecology--Great Lakes Region (North America) ; Great Lakes Region (North America)--Description and travel ; Wasser ; Nordamerika ; Niagara Falls
Internet Access
Description Access URL
Book review (H-Net) http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=24651
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
ELAM  GE160.G75W66 2009 Region 5 Library/Chicago,IL 06/17/2009
Collation xii, 199 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm.
Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 189-193) and index.
Contents Notes
I: The Niagara Frontier -- What is Niagara? Interlude: harmonic convergence, Niagara Falls -- Scajaquada: portrait of an urban creek -- Buffalo River abandoned -- Interlude: the power of water -- II: Beginnings -- Genesee torture tree: rereading little beard's signs -- Zoar Valley genesis -- Interlude: killdeer and other mysteries -- III: The eastern door -- High peaks, cloud lakes -- Oswego, Onondaga, and the politics of listing -- Le Fleuve -- Interlude: second voyage -- Leopold revisited. "In Living Waters, Margaret Wooster canoes, portages, camps beside, and wades into eight Great Lakes watersheds across New York and Quebec, returning with her pockets full of original stories from these beautiful, boggy, and prehistoric waterways. From the history of hydropower development on the Niagara River to the search for a wizard's cave in the Zoar Valley, from a portrait of an urban creek in Buffalo, to the origins and demise of New France on the St. Lawrence, Living Waters offers a fascinating, first-person exploration of the rivers that impact our world's largest freshwater ecosystem."--Jacket.