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Crises by Nature: How Humanity Saved the Biosphere - 1 views

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    "Need I say more? We are that innovation! The human species was and is the 'ecological invention', the new 'natural technology', by which the biosphere saved itself! Those accumulations of photosynthetically useless carbon - initially the woody bodies of trees, and the corpses of other plants and animals, terrestrial and aquatic, as well as, later, coal, oil, and gas - entropy, waste, for photosynthesis - represent free energy for human praxis, that is, for that new form of 'synthetic' econo-ecological activity, biomass yielding and biomass sustaining, which is human industry and industrialized agriculture."
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    And so presumably once we've fulfilled our ecological function of redistributing this carbon back to the atmosphere we'll be superfluous and therefore annihilated, i.e. climate change will kill us off? I think these deniers should go back to the drawing board...
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Industrial Revolution in Britain: Links - 10 views

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    A good collection of links to sources on the British Industrial Revolution
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The Industrial Revolution in the United States - 6 views

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    Primary Source Set | Teacher Resources - Library of Congress
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Was There an Industrial Revolution? - 1 views

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    Americans at Work Before the Civil War | EDSITEment
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Was There an Industrial Revolution? - 0 views

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    New Workplace, New Technology, New Consumers | EDSITEment
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How to teach... the industrial revolution - 4 views

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    Teacher Network | The Guardian
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Industrial Revolution - 21 views

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    "The Industrial Revolution had a profound effect on all levels of society in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. How people lived and worked changed significantly during this time."
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Spinning the Web - 16 views

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    A site on the history of the industrial revolution in Britain.  Includes activities and primary sources.
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Industrial Revolution Sourcebook - 10 views

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    Internet History Sourcebooks
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The Exhibition - The Human Factor - Baker Library | Bloomberg Center, Historical Collec... - 2 views

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    Beautiful photographs which catch the dignity of everyday work. Sorry, had a poetic moment. The pics are choice.
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Historical Collections - Baker Library | Bloomberg Center - 1 views

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    A vast collection on the business history of the United States since its inception.
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    From its inception, Baker Library has collected rare and unique materials that focus on the evolution of business and industry. Spanning seven centuries, the collections include manuscripts, rare books, pamphlets, broadsides, photographs, prints, advertising ephemera, and corporate reports. These rich and varied collections support research in a remarkably diverse range of fields.
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The Industrial Revolution - 7 views

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    Flow of history
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Pilgrims and Progress: How Magazines Made Thanksgiving - 4 views

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    This academically rigorous article may be beyond even the highest functioning AP US History students. But all teachers will find this article aiming a question directly at their curriculum - Do you teach a myth as a cultural affirmation? The essay argues that "traveling home to turkey and all the trimmings was "invented", not in 17th century Massachusetts, but in 19th century Philadelphia in the pages of the nation's most widely circulated magazines and in respond to the changing American scene. Two hundred years after the Pilgrims' quit commemorations, Thanksgiving developed a uniform national profile, impelled by its promoters ideas about republican identity, ideas diffused by a publishing industry with increasingly national reach"
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The Travel Film Archive | Stock Footage from around the World - 8 views

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    Travel back in time and around the world with The Travel Film Archive. The Travel Film Archive is a collection of travelogues and educational and industrial films that show the world the way it was between 1900 and 1970. Among our holdings are archives of the renowned travel filmmakers Burton Holmes, Andre de la Varre, and James A. FitzPatrick, as well as footage shot by many other intinerant cameramen. Footage from The Travel Film Archive is available for licensing from Getty Images and the TFA Network of agents, either directly or through this site. At this time we do not provide footage for personal use.
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