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Empire of Extinction - Russians and the North Pacific's Strange Beasts of the Sea, 1741-1867 (Paperback)
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Empire of Extinction - Russians and the North Pacific's Strange Beasts of the Sea, 1741-1867 (Paperback)
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In the second half of the eighteenth century, the Russian
Empire-already the largest on earth-expanded its dominion onto the
ocean. Through a series of government-sponsored voyages of
discovery and the establishment of a private fur trade, Russians
crossed and re-crossed the Bering Strait and the North Pacific
Ocean, establishing colonies in Kamchatka and Alaska and exporting
marine mammal furs to Europe and China. In the process they
radically transformed the North Pacific, causing environmental
catastrophe. In one of the most hotly-contested imperial arenas of
the day, the Russian empire organized a host of Siberian and
Alaskan native peoples to rapaciously hunt for fur seals, sea
otters, and other fur-bearing animals. The animals declined
precipitously, and Steller's sea cow went extinct. This destruction
captured the attention of natural historians who for the first time
began to recognize the threat of species extinction. These experts
drew upon Enlightenment and Romantic-era ideas about nature and
imperialism but their ideas were refracted through Russian
scientific culture and influenced by the region's unique ecology.
Cosmopolitan scientific networks ensured the spread of their ideas
throughout Europe. Heeding the advice of these scientific experts,
Russian colonial governors began long-term management of marine
mammal stocks and instituted some of the colonial world's most
forward-thinking conservationist policies. Highlighting the
importance of the North Pacific in Russian imperial and global
environmental history, Empire of Extinction focuses on the
development of ideas about the natural world in a crucial location
far from what has been considered the center of progressive
environmental attitudes.
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