One of the largest estuaries on the North Atlantic coast,
Narragansett Bay served as a gateway for colonial expansion in the
seventeenth century and the birthplace of American
industrialization in the late eighteenth. Christopher Pastore
presents an environmental history of this watery corner of the
Atlantic world, beginning with the first European settlement in
1636 and ending with the dissolution of the Blackstone Canal
Company in 1849. Between Land and Sea "traces how the Bay s complex
ecology shaped the contours of European habitation, trade, and
resource use, and how littoral settlers in turn reconfigured the
physical and cultural boundaries between humans and nature.
Narragansett Bay emerges in Pastore s account as much more than
a geological formation. Rather, he reimagines the nexus of land and
sea as a brackish borderland shaped by the tension between what
English settlers saw as improvable land and the perpetual forces of
the North Atlantic Ocean. By draining swamps, damming rivers, and
digging canals, settlers transformed a marshy coastal margin into a
clearly defined edge. The resultant coastline proved less
resilient, less able to absorb the blows of human initiative and
natural variation than the soggy fractal of water and earth it
replaced.
Today, as sea levels rise and superstorms batter coasts with
increasing ferocity, Between Land and Sea" calls on the
environmentally-minded to make a space in their notions of progress
for impermanence and uncertainty in the natural world."
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