Permafrost Country: Eastern Siberia and the Making of a Soviet Science

This dissertation argues that a specific conception of frozen earth as permafrost evolved as a result of political and economic considerations, and that a Soviet and eventually global science emerged from the unique space of eastern Siberia. Interactions with the land produced ideas that became part...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chu, Pey-Yi
Other Authors: Kotkin, Stephen M., History Department
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Princeton, NJ : Princeton University 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01gt54kn04h
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spelling ftprincetonuniv:oai:dataspace.princeton.edu:88435/dsp01gt54kn04h 2024-09-15T18:17:45+00:00 Permafrost Country: Eastern Siberia and the Making of a Soviet Science Chu, Pey-Yi Kotkin, Stephen M. History Department 2011 http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01gt54kn04h en eng Princeton, NJ : Princeton University The Mudd Manuscript Library retains one bound copy of each dissertation. Search for these copies in the library's main catalog http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01gt54kn04h earth science environmental history Lena River Valley permafrost Republic of Sakha Siberia History Russian history History of science Academic dissertations (Ph.D.) 2011 ftprincetonuniv 2024-08-21T04:03:22Z This dissertation argues that a specific conception of frozen earth as permafrost evolved as a result of political and economic considerations, and that a Soviet and eventually global science emerged from the unique space of eastern Siberia. Interactions with the land produced ideas that became part of universal ways of understanding the circumpolar North as well as the consequences of climate change. The origins of permafrost science lie in the region of northern Eurasia east of the Enisei River where European naturalists initially encountered a curious phenomenon: the ground remained frozen throughout the year to unknown depths, even when the atmospheric temperature was high. In the nineteenth century, this geophysical puzzle motivated expeditions to record measurements and descriptions of the land. At the same time, activities connected to the Russian colonization of eastern Siberia revealed frozen earth to be an obstacle for economic development and inspired attempts to study it systematically. Permafrost as a concept, and a formalized discipline to study it, first appeared in the USSR during the establishment of a command economy and centralization of science administration. In 1931, the Academy of Sciences defined frozen earth as ground having a negative temperature for two or more years and officially recognized vechnaia merzlota , or permafrost, as its scientific name, provoking objections about the term's accuracy from a geological standpoint. Gatekeepers of the new field enforced the definition, however, arguing that it served the engineering requirements of industrialization in the northern and eastern Soviet Union. Infrastructure construction in cold environments, including the design and building of roads, buildings, and water systems, became embedded within the science of frozen earth. When Americans and Canadians, during and after World War II, drew upon precedents in the USSR for engineering in high latitudes, Soviet concepts entered international discourse. A term that is now part of global ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis lena river permafrost Republic of Sakha Sakha Siberia DataSpace at Princeton University
institution Open Polar
collection DataSpace at Princeton University
op_collection_id ftprincetonuniv
language English
topic earth science
environmental history
Lena River Valley
permafrost
Republic of Sakha
Siberia
History
Russian history
History of science
spellingShingle earth science
environmental history
Lena River Valley
permafrost
Republic of Sakha
Siberia
History
Russian history
History of science
Chu, Pey-Yi
Permafrost Country: Eastern Siberia and the Making of a Soviet Science
topic_facet earth science
environmental history
Lena River Valley
permafrost
Republic of Sakha
Siberia
History
Russian history
History of science
description This dissertation argues that a specific conception of frozen earth as permafrost evolved as a result of political and economic considerations, and that a Soviet and eventually global science emerged from the unique space of eastern Siberia. Interactions with the land produced ideas that became part of universal ways of understanding the circumpolar North as well as the consequences of climate change. The origins of permafrost science lie in the region of northern Eurasia east of the Enisei River where European naturalists initially encountered a curious phenomenon: the ground remained frozen throughout the year to unknown depths, even when the atmospheric temperature was high. In the nineteenth century, this geophysical puzzle motivated expeditions to record measurements and descriptions of the land. At the same time, activities connected to the Russian colonization of eastern Siberia revealed frozen earth to be an obstacle for economic development and inspired attempts to study it systematically. Permafrost as a concept, and a formalized discipline to study it, first appeared in the USSR during the establishment of a command economy and centralization of science administration. In 1931, the Academy of Sciences defined frozen earth as ground having a negative temperature for two or more years and officially recognized vechnaia merzlota , or permafrost, as its scientific name, provoking objections about the term's accuracy from a geological standpoint. Gatekeepers of the new field enforced the definition, however, arguing that it served the engineering requirements of industrialization in the northern and eastern Soviet Union. Infrastructure construction in cold environments, including the design and building of roads, buildings, and water systems, became embedded within the science of frozen earth. When Americans and Canadians, during and after World War II, drew upon precedents in the USSR for engineering in high latitudes, Soviet concepts entered international discourse. A term that is now part of global ...
author2 Kotkin, Stephen M.
History Department
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Chu, Pey-Yi
author_facet Chu, Pey-Yi
author_sort Chu, Pey-Yi
title Permafrost Country: Eastern Siberia and the Making of a Soviet Science
title_short Permafrost Country: Eastern Siberia and the Making of a Soviet Science
title_full Permafrost Country: Eastern Siberia and the Making of a Soviet Science
title_fullStr Permafrost Country: Eastern Siberia and the Making of a Soviet Science
title_full_unstemmed Permafrost Country: Eastern Siberia and the Making of a Soviet Science
title_sort permafrost country: eastern siberia and the making of a soviet science
publisher Princeton, NJ : Princeton University
publishDate 2011
url http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01gt54kn04h
genre lena river
permafrost
Republic of Sakha
Sakha
Siberia
genre_facet lena river
permafrost
Republic of Sakha
Sakha
Siberia
op_relation The Mudd Manuscript Library retains one bound copy of each dissertation. Search for these copies in the library's main catalog
http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01gt54kn04h
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