The nature of gold: an environmental history of the Alaska/Yukon gold rush

Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1997 Between 1897 and 1900 thousands of miners flocked to the Yukon interior of Canada and Alaska in search of placer gold on the Klondike, Stewart, Manook, Fortymile, and other tributaries of the Yukon River. Through a close reading of gold miners' jo...

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Main Author: Morse, Kathryn Taylor
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1773/10468
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spelling ftunivwashington:oai:digital.lib.washington.edu:1773/10468 2024-06-02T08:15:54+00:00 The nature of gold: an environmental history of the Alaska/Yukon gold rush Morse, Kathryn Taylor 1997 vii, 419 p. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/10468 en_US eng b40458453 38541260 http://hdl.handle.net/1773/10468 Copyright is held by the individual authors. Theses--History Thesis 1997 ftunivwashington 2024-05-06T11:39:40Z Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1997 Between 1897 and 1900 thousands of miners flocked to the Yukon interior of Canada and Alaska in search of placer gold on the Klondike, Stewart, Manook, Fortymile, and other tributaries of the Yukon River. Through a close reading of gold miners' journals and letters, newspapers, political tracts, and government reports, the dissertation reveals the interconnections between nature and culture in gold and the gold standard, and in the three major areas of gold rush labor: placer mining, transportation, and supply. Through this work, gold miners forged connections between the Yukon interior and the outside industrial world, particularly the city of Seattle, and became part of the larger story of the linkages formed between American cities and hinterlands with the expansion of capitalism.Gold and gold mining demonstrated how complicated were the ways in which people valued parts of the natural world. Late 19th-century Americans gave gold cultural value, but called that value natural. They understood gold to be naturally money and believed that their industrial economy and their very civilization required growing stocks of metal money. Seeking escape from the restrictions of urban, industrial labor, miners made a journey to a place they deemed natural to extract gold from the earth and return with it to civilization.What humans valued had far-reaching consequences for both humans and ecosystems. Miners stripped ground vegetation, cut and burned riparian forests, dug and sluiced tons of earth, and dumped sediment in streams and rivers. The foods they ate and the diseases they carried transformed the material and cultural world of native peoples who provided miners with fish and meat and guided them over the Chilkoot and up the Yukon. The miners' labor demonstrated that the ways in which human beings took resources from the earth involved living systems and reorganized those systems into new patterns of production and consumption. Everything harvested from the material ... Thesis Yukon river Alaska Yukon University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks Canada Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks
op_collection_id ftunivwashington
language English
topic Theses--History
spellingShingle Theses--History
Morse, Kathryn Taylor
The nature of gold: an environmental history of the Alaska/Yukon gold rush
topic_facet Theses--History
description Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1997 Between 1897 and 1900 thousands of miners flocked to the Yukon interior of Canada and Alaska in search of placer gold on the Klondike, Stewart, Manook, Fortymile, and other tributaries of the Yukon River. Through a close reading of gold miners' journals and letters, newspapers, political tracts, and government reports, the dissertation reveals the interconnections between nature and culture in gold and the gold standard, and in the three major areas of gold rush labor: placer mining, transportation, and supply. Through this work, gold miners forged connections between the Yukon interior and the outside industrial world, particularly the city of Seattle, and became part of the larger story of the linkages formed between American cities and hinterlands with the expansion of capitalism.Gold and gold mining demonstrated how complicated were the ways in which people valued parts of the natural world. Late 19th-century Americans gave gold cultural value, but called that value natural. They understood gold to be naturally money and believed that their industrial economy and their very civilization required growing stocks of metal money. Seeking escape from the restrictions of urban, industrial labor, miners made a journey to a place they deemed natural to extract gold from the earth and return with it to civilization.What humans valued had far-reaching consequences for both humans and ecosystems. Miners stripped ground vegetation, cut and burned riparian forests, dug and sluiced tons of earth, and dumped sediment in streams and rivers. The foods they ate and the diseases they carried transformed the material and cultural world of native peoples who provided miners with fish and meat and guided them over the Chilkoot and up the Yukon. The miners' labor demonstrated that the ways in which human beings took resources from the earth involved living systems and reorganized those systems into new patterns of production and consumption. Everything harvested from the material ...
format Thesis
author Morse, Kathryn Taylor
author_facet Morse, Kathryn Taylor
author_sort Morse, Kathryn Taylor
title The nature of gold: an environmental history of the Alaska/Yukon gold rush
title_short The nature of gold: an environmental history of the Alaska/Yukon gold rush
title_full The nature of gold: an environmental history of the Alaska/Yukon gold rush
title_fullStr The nature of gold: an environmental history of the Alaska/Yukon gold rush
title_full_unstemmed The nature of gold: an environmental history of the Alaska/Yukon gold rush
title_sort nature of gold: an environmental history of the alaska/yukon gold rush
publishDate 1997
url http://hdl.handle.net/1773/10468
geographic Canada
Yukon
geographic_facet Canada
Yukon
genre Yukon river
Alaska
Yukon
genre_facet Yukon river
Alaska
Yukon
op_relation b40458453
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op_rights Copyright is held by the individual authors.
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