Gardeners of Eden: Rediscovering Our Importance to Nature
Dan Dagget believes that humanity can have a positive effect on the land.  He demonstrates case after case of positive human engagement in the environment and of managed ecosystems and restored areas that are richer, more diverse, and healthier than unmanaged ones. Much of pre-Columbian America, he contends, was not a pristine wilderness but an ancient garden managed over millennia by native peoples who shaped the plant and animal communities around them to the mutual benefit of all.

Dagget recommends a new kind of environmentalism based on management, science, evolution, and holism, and served by humans who enrich the environment even as they benefit from it. His new environmentalism offers hopeful solutions to the current ecological crisis and a new purpose for our human energies and ideals. This book is essential reading for anyone concerned with the earth and anyone seeking a viable way for our burgeoning human population to continue to live upon it.
 
 
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Gardeners of Eden: Rediscovering Our Importance to Nature
Dan Dagget believes that humanity can have a positive effect on the land.  He demonstrates case after case of positive human engagement in the environment and of managed ecosystems and restored areas that are richer, more diverse, and healthier than unmanaged ones. Much of pre-Columbian America, he contends, was not a pristine wilderness but an ancient garden managed over millennia by native peoples who shaped the plant and animal communities around them to the mutual benefit of all.

Dagget recommends a new kind of environmentalism based on management, science, evolution, and holism, and served by humans who enrich the environment even as they benefit from it. His new environmentalism offers hopeful solutions to the current ecological crisis and a new purpose for our human energies and ideals. This book is essential reading for anyone concerned with the earth and anyone seeking a viable way for our burgeoning human population to continue to live upon it.
 
 
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Gardeners of Eden: Rediscovering Our Importance to Nature

Gardeners of Eden: Rediscovering Our Importance to Nature

Gardeners of Eden: Rediscovering Our Importance to Nature

Gardeners of Eden: Rediscovering Our Importance to Nature

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Overview

Dan Dagget believes that humanity can have a positive effect on the land.  He demonstrates case after case of positive human engagement in the environment and of managed ecosystems and restored areas that are richer, more diverse, and healthier than unmanaged ones. Much of pre-Columbian America, he contends, was not a pristine wilderness but an ancient garden managed over millennia by native peoples who shaped the plant and animal communities around them to the mutual benefit of all.

Dagget recommends a new kind of environmentalism based on management, science, evolution, and holism, and served by humans who enrich the environment even as they benefit from it. His new environmentalism offers hopeful solutions to the current ecological crisis and a new purpose for our human energies and ideals. This book is essential reading for anyone concerned with the earth and anyone seeking a viable way for our burgeoning human population to continue to live upon it.
 
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781943859368
Publisher: University of Nevada Press
Publication date: 03/15/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 152
File size: 65 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Dan Dagget is an author, public speaker, and a consultant on restorative land management. His first book, Beyond the Rangeland Conflict: Toward a West That Works was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize and has been recognized as one of the most important books written about the American West. For more than 30 years he has been involved as an activist with a number of environmental groups from Earth First! to Audubon. He lives in Sedona, AZ with his wife Trish.
 
Tom Bean is a prolific and well-published photographer based in Flagstaff, AZ. His photographs have been featured in hundreds of publications including National Geographic and Arizona Highways. He has a particular interest in creating images that illustrate the positive interactions of culture and the natural world.
 

Table of Contents

Table of Contents Introduction. You Can’t Have Your Cake Unless You Eat It, Too: On Duel-ism; Living like Bees, Beavers, and Wolves; Using Alien Solutions to Earthly Problems; Becoming Native Again Chapter 1. Pink Panthers and Lost Tribes: Restoring Life to Dead Land; The Pink Panther People; A Lost Tribe Among Us; Showing Dog Tricks to Cat Fanatics; The Leave-It-Alone Assumption; Making the Environment Irrelevant; A Scandal in Eden Chapter 2. Evidence of Gardeners in Eden: The Amazon as Cultural Artifact; Straight as a Rifle Shot; Self-Renewing Soil; Counterfeit Icons (False Advertising); A Map of Eden; Wild and Mutual Kingdom; Stepping Out from Behind the Blinders Chapter 3. Echoes of Eden – Beyond Symbiosis to Synergy: The Birds Don’t Want to Live Over There All by Themselves; Don’t Run Over That Fish!; None Is the Loneliest Number (It’s a Pretty Bad Score, Too); The Synergy-Minus-One Test; Spillover Synergies; Hu Chapter 4. Droughtbusters: Trincheras and Trincheritas; Effective Rainfall; Pooping and Stomping; Stopping a Flash Flood with Grass Blades; How Many Times Are We Going to Have to Learn This Lesson? Chapter 5. Lub-Dub: That’s CPR Not CRP; Don’t You Smell That Smell?; The Honey Bear Test; Sequestering Carbon; Restoring One of the Wonders of the World Chapter 6. Learning on the Fringe: Eccentric Geniuses in a Ghost Town; Water Rises to Life; Stepping on the Sponge; Terra Preta Revisited; It’s Up to the Bugs; Pleistocene Park — If We Build It, Will They Come? Chapter 7. Return of the Natives: A World of Relationships, Not of Things; Making Home Home Again; Lub-Dubbing a Refuge; Getting Natives to Invade Invasives; Learning in the Dead Zone Chapter 8. Eden in Flames: Bubble Cities and Space Stations; The Myth of Natural Fire; Fire Opens the Door; Fire That’s Warm and Fuzzy; Controlled Until the First Match; Hydrophobic Soils Chapter 9. The Economics of Eden: The Currency of Mutualism; Organic, Natural, Grass-Fed, and Pasture-Raised; An Epiphany for an Investigative Journalist; The Conflict Economy; The Advantages of Using More Land Chapter 10. Building a New Economy for Eden: Marketing the Fruits of Eden; You Can’t Sell It Unless You Can Measure It; The Three D’s; Ultralights, Quads, and Ipacs; Cowboying from Satellite; Tool-Using Plants; Reintroducing Ourselves to Nature Chapter 11. Becoming Native Again – Toward a New Environmentalism: Gone Pack Hunting Lately?; A College Course on Eden; Discovering the Value of Earlier Cultures; A Unified Environmental Theory; Revoking the Free Pass for the Leave-It-Alone Assumption Epilogue Acknowledgments About the Author and Photographer

What People are Saying About This

Dennis Church

“A book about healing humankind’s alienation from nature. One of those rare books that cause you to see the world through new eyes. Once you see humankind as an integral part of nature, your eyes snap open and all of a sudden the many ways we have or could live in mutual benefit with nature come into view. Part of a new paradigm for a sustainable future. Will become a classic."

Hunter Lovins

“When Dan offered me an advance copy of Gardeners of Eden, I said I didn’t want to review it, I wanted to use it, so I took it to Afghanistan with me. They’re in a serious drought there and, well, you know the rest of the story. I figured if this stuff will work on a pile of poisonous mine waste in Nevada, it’ll work anywhere. In this book, Dan tells us how to be native again. I can’t think of anything more valuable than that.”

Gary Paul Nabhan

"Dan Dagget sees the world freshly, in a way that may save it, or at least save our capacity to participate creatively in its dynamics. This is the most important conservation manifesto since Aldo Leopold's Land Ethic."

Courtney White

“Aldo Leopold once wrote, ‘The only progress that counts is on the back forty.’ In his new book, Dan Dagget gives us an energizing look at where real progress is being made, and where hope can be found. It’s fun, it’s provocative, and I guarantee that when you finish this book, you won’t look at the West, or the conservation movement, the same way again.”

Ed Marston

”Environmentalism’s biggest need isn’t for more activists, or even for more protected lands. It most needs new and better ideas. With this book Dan Daggett does more than just think outside the environmental box. He has torn up the old box and built us a new and improved one.”

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