Lester, Gustave (Author)
Oreskes, Naomi (Advisor)
Who found the raw materials of the industrial revolution and how did they find them? The expansion of industrial capitalism depended on the increasingly intense exploitation of mineral lands. But key industrial resources—coal, copper, iron, and lead—were hidden away within the earth and wasted mining ventures were a hazardous expense. How, then, did capitalists and imperial powers determine which lands could be profitably extracted? In this dissertation, I argue that the United States transformed from a mineral importer to a mineral empire by becoming a patron of the earth sciences and exploiting Indigenous peoples’ knowledge of their territories. Over the course of the long nineteenth century, many US political leaders and men of science saw Indigenous power as the most significant contingency to the realization of industrial political economy and state geologists would guide the twin trajectories of dispossession and US industrial development by providing political leaders with key information about the natural resources embedded within Indigenous lands. Focusing on the copper and iron rich lands of Anishinaabe nations in the Great Lakes region and the lead rich lands of the Sauk, Mesquakie, and Ho-Chunk nations of the Upper Mississippi Valley, I show how geological mapping and dispossession proved critical to the growth of mineral-intensive US industrial manufacturing. By focusing on the practices and conflicts involved in locating and acquiring resource-rich territories prior to their extraction, this project reveals how the United States became a global industrial power not by discovering abundance within its own territory, but by studying and seizing the mineral wealth of Indigenous nations. The results of this study are salient to the contemporary efforts of Indigenous nations to take back, steward, and receive just compensation for the United States’ historical and ongoing expropriation of their land and wealth.
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Book
Curtis, Kent A;
(2013)
Gambling on Ore: The Nature of Metal Mining in the United States, 1860--1910
(/isis/citation/CBB001420380/)
Book
Allison Margaret Bigelow;
(2020)
Mining Language: Racial Thinking, Indigenous Knowledge, and Colonial Metallurgy in the Early Modern Iberian World
(/isis/citation/CBB877754784/)
Article
SELBY HEARTH;
(2024)
Geologists as Colonial Scouts: The Rogers Expedition to Otavi and Tsumeb, Namibia, 1892–1895
(/isis/citation/CBB799232063/)
Thesis
Chambers, Mark Milton;
(2012)
River of Gray Gold: Cultural and Material Changes in the Land of Ores, Country of Minerals, 1719--1839
(/isis/citation/CBB001560771/)
Article
Nelson Sanjad;
Ermelinda Pataca;
Rafael Rogério Nascimento dos Santos;
(2021)
Knowledge and Circulation of Plants: Unveiling the Participation of Amazonian Indigenous Peoples in the Construction of Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Botany
(/isis/citation/CBB714153328/)
Book
Seth Archer;
(2018)
Sharks Upon the Land: Colonialism, Indigenous Health, and Culture in Hawai'i, 1778-1855
(/isis/citation/CBB725520854/)
Thesis
E. Bennett Jones;
(2021)
'The Indians Say': Settler Colonialism and the Scientific Study of North America, 1722 to 1848
(/isis/citation/CBB627267294/)
Article
Robyn d'Avignon;
(2020)
Spirited Geobodies: Producing Subterranean Property in Nineteenth-Century Bambuk, West Africa
(/isis/citation/CBB364641510/)
Book
MacDowell, Laurel Sefton;
(2012)
An Environmental History of Canada
(/isis/citation/CBB001422385/)
Article
Gregory Hitch;
Marcus Grignon;
(2023)
A Forest of Energy: Settler Colonialism, Knowledge Production, and Sugar Maple Kinship in the Menominee Community
(/isis/citation/CBB488449258/)
Book
Erika Marie Bsumek;
(2023)
The Foundations of Glen Canyon Dam: Infrastructures of Dispossession on the Colorado Plateau
(/isis/citation/CBB870466471/)
Book
Ryan Walker;
Ted Jojola;
David Natcher;
(2013)
Reclaiming Indigenous Planning
(/isis/citation/CBB137707609/)
Book
Nancy J. Turner;
(2020)
Plants, People, and Places: The Roles of Ethnobotany and Ethnoecology in Indigenous Peoples' Land Rights in Canada and Beyond
(/isis/citation/CBB548513205/)
Article
Sarah Irving-Stonebraker;
(2017)
“The Sagacity of the Indians”: William Dampier’s Surprising Respect for Indigenous Knowledge
(/isis/citation/CBB079440616/)
Thesis
Christopher Michael Blakley;
(2019)
Inhuman Empire: Slavery and Nonhuman Animals in the British Atlantic World
(/isis/citation/CBB485703529/)
Book
Morse, Kathryn;
(2003)
The Nature of Gold: An Environmental History of the Klondike Gold Rush
(/isis/citation/CBB000471212/)
Article
K. R. Aalto;
(2017)
Philip Tyson's 1849 Study of California Gold Prospects
(/isis/citation/CBB904353285/)
Article
Paul Lucier;
(2018)
Comstock Capitalism: The Law, the Lode, and the Science
(/isis/citation/CBB209706890/)
Article
Dana Luciano;
(2022)
Unsettled Ground: Indigenous Prophecy, Geological Fantasy, and the New Madrid Earthquakes
(/isis/citation/CBB222619910/)
Article
Callahan, Richard J., Jr.;
Lofton, Kathryn;
Seales, Chad E.;
(2010)
Allegories of Progress: Industrial Religion in the United States
(/isis/citation/CBB001030733/)
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