Industrial Vestiges: Legacies of Ancillary Impacts of Resource Development

This article offers a different way to understand the heritage of extractive industries by exploring the material afterlives of what has been termed the “ancillary impacts of resource development”—a variety of quarries, forest cuts, transportation corridors, and power lines that surround industrial...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Historical Archaeology
Main Author: Venovcevs, Anatolijs
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30322
https://doi.org/10.1007/s41636-023-00389-0
Description
Summary:This article offers a different way to understand the heritage of extractive industries by exploring the material afterlives of what has been termed the “ancillary impacts of resource development”—a variety of quarries, forest cuts, transportation corridors, and power lines that surround industrial operations, especially those created in areas distant from established industrial population centers. To study this, the article expands upon the concept of “vestige” to explore the landscapes around two single-industry mining towns in Kola Peninsula, Russia, and in Labrador, Canada, by specifically focusing on two abandoned quarries located in each. The results highlight the need to explore developments that trail behind industrial settlement of colonial hinterlands. By focusing specifically on the afterlives of such developments, the article demonstrates how chronological and geographical boundaries of resource extraction are blurred over time, creating a deep, unruly, self-perpetuating set of legacies.