Humboldtian Science, Creole Meteorology, and the Discovery of Human-Caused Climate Change in Northern South America

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Issue Date
2011Author
Cushman, Gregory T.
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
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The belief that human land use is capable of causing large-scale climatic change lies at the root of modern conservation thought and policy. The origins and popularization of this belief were deeply politicized. Alexander von Humboldt’s treatment of the Lake Valencia basin in Venezuela and the desert coast of Peru as natural laboratories for observing the interaction between geophysical and cultural forces was central to this discovery, as was Humboldt’s belief that European colonialism was especially destructive to the land. Humboldt’s overt cultivation of disciples was critical to building the prestige of this discovery and popularizing the Humboldtian scientific program, which depended fundamentally on local observers, but willfully marginalized chorographic knowledge systems. In creating new, global forms of environmental understanding, Humboldtian science also generated new forms of ignorance.
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This is the published version, © 2011 by The History of Science Society. All rights reserved.
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Cushman, Gregory T. Humboldtian Science, Creole Meteorology, and the Discovery of Human-Caused Climate Change in Northern South America. Osiris 26 (2011): 19-44. Special issue Revisiting Klima, edited by James R. Fleming and Vladimir Jankovic
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