Originally published in 1987, this volume examines the ideals and realities of river use in 19th Century Britain and the failure of legal and technological remedies for river pollution. It deals with the involvement of scientists, particularly chemists, in pollution inquiries and considers the effects on the normal workings of the scientific community of scientists' participation in the adversary forums in which water and sewage policy was made. It discusses 19th ideas of decomposition, disease causation and purification and examines the gap between the abilities of science and the needs of society that developed as the existence of water-borne disease became increasingly clear. It also deals with the politicization of water bacteriology and the emergence of a technology of biological sewage treatment from a political context.



Autorentext

Hamlin\, Christopher

Titel
What Becomes of Pollution?
Untertitel
Adversary Science and the Controversy on the Self-Purification of Rivers in Britain, 1850-1900
EAN
9781000691726
Format
PDF
Veröffentlichung
04.11.2019
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Anzahl Seiten
640