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Crimea and the Black Sea : an environmental history / by Carlos Cordova.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Cordova, Carlos E., 1965- author.
Series:
Environmental history and global change series.
Environmental history and global change
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Environmental geography--Ukraine--Black Sea Lowland.
Environmental geography.
Environmental geography--Ukraine--Crimea.
Human ecology--Ukraine--Black Sea Lowland.
Human ecology.
Human ecology--Ukraine--Crimea.
Black Sea Lowland (Ukraine)--Environmental conditions--History.
Black Sea Lowland (Ukraine).
Black Sea--Environmental conditions--History.
Black Sea.
Crimea (Ukraine)--Environmental conditions--History.
Crimea (Ukraine).
Physical Description:
1 online resource (232 p.)
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
London : I.B. Tauris, 2015.
Summary:
"Crimea has a rich and varied history. Mentioned in the writings of Strabo, Herodotus and Pliny the Elder, it was colonized by the Huns, the Goths and the Mongols and was part of the Roman, Byzantine and Venetian empires, until it annexed by Russia in the eighteenth century. It suffered in the Crimean War, saw bloody battles in the Second World War and was transferred to the Ukraine by Khrushchev in the 1950s. Most recently it has drawn international attention as it was once more annexed by Russia in its dispute with Ukraine. The environmental history of Crimea is similarly complex. Formerly known as the Tauric Peninsula, its landscape of plains, piedmont and mountains, is surrounded to the east by the Azov Sea, to the north by the Sivash lagoonal system and to the south and west by the Black Sea. The Black Sea in particular has had a major impact on nearly all aspects of Crimea's natural and cultural history, from the impact of its flooding in prehistoric times to the environmental pollution problems of the modern era. Carlos Cordova explains the making of Crimea's natural environment, from its geology and relief to its climate and soils. He explores the rich flora and fauna of the peninsula, including the biogeographical isolation of Crimea, its endemic and relict species, as well as the struggle to protect species and their habitats. He details the transformation of the landscape brought about by Greek farmers and other Mediterranean groups, as well as the marked changes resulting from Khrushchev's Virgin Lands Campaign, which saw virtually all the steppe trurned into cropland. The development of the south coast - the so-called Russian Riviera - as a tourist destination and the pollution brought about by the development of agriculture and industry are also included. The strategic importance of Crimea as a site for many Russian naval bases has meant that there has been little access to the region and it is poorly known in the west. With the collapse of the Soviet Union the situation changed. Making full use of the new accessibility, and drawing on almost two decades of research in Crimea, Carlos Cordova's pioneering study represents the first modern work in the English language on the environmental history of this little known but environmentally significant region."--Bloomsbury Publishing.
Contents:
List of figures and tables
Preface and acknowledgements
Notes on sources and usage
Russian and Ukrainian Cyrillic script transliteration
1 Crimea and the Black Sea: themes in environmental history
2 The history of environmental knowledge
3 Physical environment
4 Flora and fauna
5 Ice Age Crimea
6 Warming, rising seas, and humans
7 From antiquity to the eighteenth century
8 The formation of the modern landscape
9 Human impacts on land and sea
10 Biogeographic background to conservation
11 Conservation issues and protected areas
12 The Mediterraneanization of Crimea
References
Bibliography
Index.
Notes:
Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
9780755620081
0755620089
9780857739032
0857739034
OCLC:
953661407

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