Beavering

Authors

  • Mary Beth LaDow Independent Researcher

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5282/rcc-springs-6381

Abstract

On a beaver pond in Mid-Coast Maine, a quirky relationship between humans and beavers unfolds each year. The result is a small climate bonanza—a carbon sequestering, water-regulating, species-diversifying wetland. Beavers were hunted to near extinction worldwide by the twentieth century, eliminating, too, the wetlands that once covered large parts of North America and Eurasia. Now, in the twenty-first century, people are inviting beavers back, as vital partners in adapting to climate change. From Rachel Carson’s New England stomping grounds, here is one such story.

Author Biography

  • Mary Beth LaDow, Independent Researcher

    Mary Beth LaDow is a historian, speechwriter, and author based in Massachusetts, who spends most of her time in Maine and Montana. Her 2001 book, The Medicine Line: Life and Death on a North American Borderland, explores the environmental and cultural histories of the US and Canada, and she is currently investigating the relationship between Henry David Thoreau and China. She was a Carson Fellow in the spring of 2019.

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Published

13-06-2024

Issue

Section

Articles