15 December 2008

Whole Earth Library Giving Tree


Share Books. Save Trees.

Visit the Giving Tree at Whole Earth Library at Thoreau


Each year thirty million trees are cut down to print books in the United States alone. One way to reduce this growing number is to share books by visiting the Whole Earth Library. They typical library in the United States prevents 250 tons of greenhouse-gas emissions each year, because a library book has only a fraction of the economic and ecological cost of a book purchased from a store.

The unique collection of sustainability-focused books and resources at the Whole Earth Library gives you the incredible opportunity to learn about the latest in environmental stewardship while practicing it. This holiday season you can demonstrate your support for our local library at the Giving Tree. By making a small donation of ten dollars or more you can help to make the collection grow and to keep it current in these rapidly changing fields of knowledge it covers. Each donor will receive a bookmark “leaf” to hang from the tree. Donations can be brought directly to the library during regular hours, or contact Bruce DeMartini at bruce@thoreau.org. While you are there, check out a book for your holiday travels, or recycle your previously-read books at the Book Swap Cart.

Visit us in the back of Presidio Building 1016, at Lincoln Blvd. Torney Ave.

The week of December 15, we will be open every day from 11:00am to 2:00pm



09 December 2008

Charity Vargas Presentation



Thursday, December 11
12:30 to 1:30p
Pacific Room at Tides


Whole Earth Library at Thoreau is pleased to kick off its first literary event with a presentation by Photographer Charity Vargas. Charity will present images from her new photography book The Presidio: Portraits of a Changing Landscape and discuss the evolving nature of the park throughout it's 200 plus year history. You can also take a look at the book online at its companion website: PresidoBook.com.


An excerpt from the introduction by Presidio Historian, Randolph Delehanty, Ph.D.

“Ms.Vargas came to live in the Presidio three years ago during this momentary pause in its long life. She started exploring the complex old post looking carefully and lovingly at its gentle sleep and slow but steady revival as a national park with a new civilian community living and working here. She has an eye for what it essential about the Presidio: the very American ordinariness of its military architecture and the strange “wildness” of its man-made forests. Many of her images put the two together in a new way, as a filigree of evocative shadows cast on the “screens” of plain white walls. They almost seem like photographs of photographs with the building walls the film on which the fugitive shadows are cast. Photography - literally writing with light - here becomes writing with shadows with the unseen light source behind us.”

Subject Guide: Personal Action

Concerned that you might have daily habits that you don't even know are devastating the ecosphere? This month we focus on books in our collection that provide practical advice for personal actions that people can take to help preserve the environment and to create a more sustainable path through life. These books are all designed to supply simple ideas and small choices you can make in your everyday routine - while you're working, exercising, eating, shopping, sleeping, etc. - even at this busy time of year. They might even help you save money. For those who want to do more, they also explore in greater detail the thinking behind these recommendations and provide pointers to additional resources, including organizations active in the field. Whether you are looking for a place to begin, for new ideas for your current action plan, or for suggestions you can share with your family and friends, these books would be a helpful place to start.


John, Sophie, & Jesse Javna. 50 Simple Things You Can Do to Save the Earth. New York: Hyperion, 2008.

For this updated edition of the 1990 bestseller, the authors worked with a cross-section of fifty environmental groups, asking them to each pick one issue they wanted to share with readers and develop a presentation and an action plan. At 50simplethings.com there are links to these and other groups, as well as a copy of the original book.

Eric Sorenson & the staff of Sightline Institute. Seven Wonders for a Cool Planet. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 2008.

Seven simple, everyday devices you probably already own or use that are and always have been friends of the climate, including the library book, which helps reduce greenhouse-gas emissions, energy consumption, and resource waste. Sharing books saves trees.

Natalia Marshall. Live an Eco-Friendly Life: Smart Ways to Get Green and Stay that Way. New York: Perigree, 2008.

From the UK, this book emphasizes the value of being part of a community in making positive changes and growing personal happiness. Learn how to have an eco-friendly party and reduce your pet's carbon paw-print.

David De Rothschild. The Live Earth Global Warming Survival Handbook: 77 Essential Skills to Stop Climate Change - or Live Through it. New York: Rodale, 2007.

The offical companion to the Live Earth concerts, in addition to helpful advice it offers ten ways to survive on an overheated planet if all else fails. It includes the alarming fact that by 2100, nearly all of California's wine regions may be unusable.

Katharine Wroth. Wake Up and Smell the Planet: the non-pompous, non-preachy grist guide to greening your day. Seattle: Skipstone, 2007.

This book is from the editors of Grist.org - a green news and humor site - and is informed by questions they've received from readers over the years. It is organized around your daily routine from when you wake up in the morning - whether to have a shower or bath - to when you go to bed at night - what kinds of sheets to use.

Ingrid Newkirk. Making Kind Choices: Everday Ways to Enhance Your Life Through Earth- and Animal-Friendly Living. New York: St. Martin's Press, 2005.

Ingrid Newkirk is the cofounder and president of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. In addition to exploring environmentally friendly behavior, she details how to incorporate cruelty-free behavior into your everday routines.

David Gershon. Low Carbon Diet: A 30 Day Program to Lose 5000 Pounds. Woodstock, NY: Empowerment Institute, 2006.

David Gershon. Water Stewardship: A 30 Day Program to Protect and Conserve our Water Resources. Woodstock, NY: Empowerment Institute, 2008.

From the Empowerment Institute, these two books provide step-by-step programs to dramatically reduce your carbon dioxide output and your impact on your local watershed. They are also guides to motivating others and helping your communities reduce their impacts as well. Help the planet and make new friends.


01 December 2008

Rent a Tree


Thoreau Center tenant Friends of the Urban Forest and San Francisco's Department of the Environment have teamed up to give residents the opportunity to rent a living Christmas tree this year (like the Small Leaf Tristania pictured left) which will then be replanted in the city's medians, sidewalks, and parks after the holidays. They might not look like your traditional holiday trees, but you can think of it as a decorating challenge and rest assured that they are well suited to life in San Francisco's unique environment. Orders will be available through next Monday, December 8th. Find out more here.

20 November 2008

Book Discussion: In Defense of Food

In Defense of Food cover

Book Discussion Group: Michael Pollan's In Defense of Food


Wednesday, December 17th
In the library, 12:30p to 1:30p





Come join your friends and co-workers and share your thoughts about the impact of the choices we make as food consumers on the health of our environment and ourselves. The Whole Earth Library will be hosting a discussion of In Defense of Food by Michael Pollan. In this follow-up to The Omnivore's Dilemma, he explores the ways in which we can make more thoughtful and balanced decisions about our food choices in today's complicated dietary landscape. The library has limited copies, so consider visiting your local public library to find a copy:

San Francisco Public Library: sfpl.org
Oakland Public Library: www.oaklandlibrary.org
Berkeley Public Library: www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org
Marin County: www.marinet.org

Please contact the library at library@thoreau.org if you are interested in attending and/or you need help finding a copy. (And yes, since we are doing this at lunch time, you will be allowed to eat in the library - just be careful around the couch).

Visit the author's web page about the book here.

17 November 2008

Thoreau Gallery Opening Reception: Art Repurposed




Mixed media assemblage.
Claus Groeger, 2008.
© Creativity Explored



Artists from Creativity Explored
At the Thoreau Center
Thursday, November 20
5:00p to 7:00p
Exhibition runs November 20 through January 16, 2009



Creativity Explored studio artists put a new spin on recycling by transforming everyday discarded objects into uncommon, original works of art.
Creativity Explored is a visual arts center in San Francisco where artists with developmental disabilities have been creating, exhibiting, and selling art for over 25 years.

To learn more about Creativity Explored, visit their gallery at 3245 16th Street, San Francisco, CA 94103. Or, contact Amy Auerbach at (415) 863-2108/ www.creativityexplored.org

CLA 2008


Your librarian attended the California Library Association annual conference in San Jose this past weekend, along with about 1200 other librarians and students from around the state who came to network, learn what is going on in the library world, worry about budget cuts, and listen to authors speak, including Michael Chabon. Apologizes to anyone who stopped by the library Friday afternoon and didn't find me here.

10 November 2008

Subject Guide: Food


And now this month's library collection subject guide about food:

"Man does not live by what he eats, but by what he digests." - Alexandre Dumas

With the fall harvests and the upcoming holidays, it is that time of year when people find themselves thinking about food perhaps more than usual. As the books in this list demonstrate, the food choices people make have profound consequences for their health and the health of the environment. They suggest that many of society's challenges today could benefit from a better understanding of our food habits - how we select food, grow it, distribute it, eat it, as well as how we assign meaning to it. People do seem to be becoming more conscious of where their food comes from, and it is a consciousness that can require them to make some difficult decisions. These works present some views on those decisions while showing that it is still possible, and perhaps even vital, to enjoy our food and to celebrate with food while consuming it responsibly.


Michael Pollan. The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals. New York: Penguin, 2006.

Pollan undertakes a personal journey to explore what he calls "our national eating disorder" and to discover why Americans consume what we do in the twenty-first century. He traces the stories of three food chains - industrial farming, organic farming both large and small, and personal hunting and gathering - from their sources through to a final meal. Along the way, he shows how our eating choices have profound political, economic, and moral implications. We are shaped by what we eat, but what we choose to eat also shapes the world and will determine the health of the environment that sustains us and all life on earth.


Ann Vileisis.
Kitchen Literacy: How We Lost Knowledge of Where Food Comes From and Why We Need to Get it Back. Washington, DC: Island Press, 2008.

How did American food habits get to where they are today? There have been significant changes over the past two centuries in how Americans have shopped, cooked, and thought about their food and diet. From actively participating in the growing of food, over time we have come to know less and less about where our foods come from and what went into making them. Where we once trusted our neighbors as a source of food knowledge, we now trust labels on boxes and cans. Ann Vileisis tracks these developments in people's thinking about food as their experience of eating changed, arguing that what we know about food has played a central role in how we perceive ourselves in the broader context of the natural world.


Fritz Allhoff and Dave Monroe, eds. Food & Philosophy: Eat, Think, and be Merry. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing, 2007.

As Epicurus showed us, the discussion of food can also be a window to important philosophical concerns. These essays from philosophers, chefs, food critics, and humorists covers a wide range of issues including aesthetics, the relationship between food and sensuality, the use of genetically modified organisms, eating disorders, fast food, indigenous food ways, and the ethical implications of our food choices. Sometimes scholarly, somtimes humorous, all of the authors share a love of food, and this thoughtful collection holds out hope for the possibility of celebrating food while learning to eat in a way that allows the planet to thrive.


Nelson Foster and Linda S. Cordell, eds. Chilies to Chocolate: Food the Americas Gave the World. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1992.

From corn to potatoes to chocolate, a significant amount of the food consumed regularly worldwide today was unknown outside the Americas when the Europeans arrived. This collection examines the biological and cultural history of a number of crops indigenous to the Americas, from their domestication by the native population to their status today. Some of them have gone global, while others, like oca and arracacha have languished in obscurity. Forgotten, perhaps, but not irrelevant as these essays argue for the significance of biodiversity to a healthy food supply.


Colin Spencer. The Heretic's Feast: A History of Vegetarianism. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1995.

What do Leonardo da Vinci, Hitler, Gandhi, and Percy Shelley have in common? They were all vegetarians, of course, and they are just a small part of this comprehensive social and cultural history that shows that vegetarianism has never been simply a diet without meat. Beginning with such acts as the refusal to partake of a sacrificial ox, vegetarianism has been linked to social dissent and the criticism of dominant norms. Whether it is a choice based on philosophy, conscience, or superstition, it is a choice bound up in a complex web of philosophical, religious, and social values. Vegetarian or meat eater, what people do eat is a symbol of what they believe.


Gary Paul Nabhan. Why Some Like it Hot: Food, Genes, and Cultural Diversity. Washington, DC: Island Press, 2004.

Ethnobiologist Gary Paul Nabhan has studied nutritional ecology for the past three decades. In this work, he travels the world to explore the complex interactions between cuisine, culture, and human evolution. He argues that traditional cuisines have evolved to fit the inhabitants of a particular place. Food sensitivities, instead of being a form of genetic malady, are adaptations different ethnic groups evolved in response to different dietary choices over millennia in particular landscapes. The later separation of ethnic populations from their traditional diets has led to epidemic rises in diabetes, heart disease, cancer, and allergies, among other maladies, and roughly 3 to 4 billion people now suffer some form of nutritionally related diseases. This genetic diversity means there are no simple, single dietary solutions, but rather a need to understand our personal food histories and to preserve our cultural and culinary diversity.


Nina L. Etkin. Edible Medicines: An Ethnopharmacology of Food. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2006.

Aztecs applied chile pepper for toothache, sore throat, and asthma. The tonic properties of coffee have been recorded in Islamic pharmacopoeia since the eleventh century. Nina Etkin investigates the role of food in health maintenance across cultures and through time, revealing the pharmacologic potential of foods in the specific cultural contexts in which they are used. Incorporating co-evolution and a biocultural perspective, she shows that food choice has been more closely linked to health than is widely thought, blurring the distinction between food and medicine in the context of real-life circumstances.

John Irving, et al., eds. Terra Madre: 1,600 Food Communities. Bra, Italy: Slow Food Editore, 2006.

Produced for the 2006 Terra Madre cofnerence, this book describes in detail 1,600 food communities in 150 countries - communities embodying a new idea of agriculture based on taste quality, sustainability, and social justice. Working for fertile soil, clean water, and the free circulation of information, these groups seek to protect biodiversity, the dignity of the rural world, and traditional knowledge.

Gallery Opening - Music and Celebration Across the Globe



This past Sunday in the hallway outside the library, Door Dog Music Productions kicked off this year's San Francisco World Music Festival with the opening of the gallery exhibition "Music and Celebration Across the Globe: An Exhibit of International Children's Art Spanning Three Decades" in collaboration with Paintbrush Diplomacy and the Thoreau Center for Sustainability. The exhibit features images of music, celebration and dance by young artists from many countries around the world over the past twenty-five years, and it runs through November 21st. The opening reception also featured live youth performers from different traditions, including eleven-year old Kurdish singer Berfin Oztoprak.

27 October 2008

Three miles of Bay Area Ridge Trail rededicated in San Jose















Over the weekend, San Jose rededicated
three miles of the Penitencia Creek Trail, part of the ongoing effort to create a 550+ mile trail around the San Francisco Bay being led by the Bay Area Ridge Trail Council.

Read about it here

And the Council's homepage is here

22 October 2008

New Book - Content by Cory Doctorow

content coverNew to the collection is Cory Doctorow's Content: Selected Essays on Technology, Creativity, Copyright, and the Future of the Future from Tachyon Press. It is the first collection of essays from this popular and provocative science fiction author and activist. From the book's website:

Hailed by Bruce Sterling as “a political activist, gizmo freak, junk collector, programmer, entrepreneur, and all-around Renaissance geek,” the Internet’s favorite high-tech culture maven is celebrated with the first collection of his infamous articles, essays, and polemics. Irreverently championing free speech and universal access to information—even if it’s just a free download of the newest Britney Spears MP3—he leads off with a mutinous talk given at Microsoft on digital rights management, insisting that they stop treating their customers as criminals. Readers will discover how America chose Happy Meal toys over copyright, why Facebook is taking a faceplant, how the Internet is basically just a giant Xerox machine, why Wikipedia is a poor cousin of The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, and how to enjoy free e-books. Practicing what he preaches, all of the author’s books, including this one, are simultaneously released in print and on the Internet under Creative Commons licenses that encourage their reuse and sharing. He argues persuasively that this practice has considerably increased his sales by enlisting readers to promote his work. Accessible to geeks and nontechies alike, this is a timely collection from an author who effortlessly surfs the zeitgeist while always generating his own wave.

20 October 2008

The Delta a Natural Heritage Area?


To accomplish that for the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta by 2010 is one of the recommendations in the Delta Vision Strategic Plan released by the Governor's Delta Vision Blue Ribbon Task Force on Friday. Will this plan be any more successful than the last few? Read about it at : Governor's panel warns delta must be fixed

And read the report at:


Delta Vision Strategic Planning Documents and Comments

10 October 2008

Subject Guide : Fire

This month's library reading guide is all about wildfire, fire ecology, and the sustainable management of our forests. You can read it below, and to show you how topical it is, the gusty dry winds you're feeling outside here in the Bay Area have prompted fire warnings through Saturday night. Read about that here.



Now the reading guide:

Fire: Fire Ecology and Forest Sustainability


California leads the nation in fire losses. So far this year, the state has already faced a destructive fire season with approximately 2,100 fires burning more than 1.2 million acres, and conditions remain potentially catastrophic until the October rains arrive. Between 1997 and 2007, wildfires in California burned more than 8,500 square miles. Overall, 37 million acres, roughly 48 percent of the state's land base, face high, very high, or extreme fire threats. The accumulated effect is an ecological crisis wreaking havoc on California wildlife biodiversity and endangering watersheds.


The risks are not expected to decline anytime soon. The wildfire season of the western United States has increased by 78 days in the past three decades, and climate scientists predict it will continue to get longer as temperatures rise and summers become drier. The growing frequency, intensity, and size of these fires are also a result of a complex set of causes including 70 years of fire suppression and patterns of land development which have more and more people living and working near fire prone areas. Yet fire also plays a significant role in the shaping of forest ecosystems. Some species are vulnerable to fires, others are resistant, and still others depend on fires to survive or reproduce. The health of many forests depends on fire, but how can it be responsibly reintroduced in the context of a warming climate? These books look at the relationship between fire and forests, the effects of human society on this relationship, and propose ways to use our developing understanding of fire ecology to manage our forests more sustainably in the future.



George Wuerthner. Wildfire: A Century of Failed Forest Policy. Washington, DC: Island Press, 2006. (Natural Environment - Reference)

This collection published by the Foundation for Deep Ecology surveys how wildfire policies and practices such as fire suppression, logging of old-growth trees, and expanding development in the wildland-urban interface have contributed to the ecological decline of our forests and to the growing costs of and threats posed by wildfire. The essays present a variety of ecological, economic, social, and political perspectives on alternatives to these harmful policies of the past, emphasizing that fire needs to be understood as a natural part of the forest ecosystem and a vital component of forest renewal. It includes a 50 page photo essay showing over time the role of fire in shaping and rejuvenating forest landscapes. Also available is an abridged collection of the essays without the photographs called The Wildfire Reader.



Stephen F. Arno and Carl E. Fielder. Mimicking Nature's Fire: Restoring Fire-Prone Forests in the West. Washington, DC: 2005. (Natural Environment)

Management in the western forests has failed to account for the historical role of fire, leading to ecological deterioration and increasing wildfire hazards. Evaluating a number of restoration projects in different forest types with contrasting management goals, the authors of this book advocate a program of restoration forestry - restoring features of fire-prone or fire-dependent forests through policies that mimic the effects of historical fires. It is a process that provides for the ecological sustainability of the forest and the resources and amenity values important to humans while reducing potential damage from wildfires, insects, and disease.



Thomas R. Vale, ed. Fire, Native Peoples, and the Natural Landscape. Washington, DC: Island Press, 2002 (California & the West)

There is no doubt that we have very different forests than those encountered by the European settlers, in large measure due to fire suppression activities. But to what extent did Native Americans in pre-European times use fire as a tool to shape the landscape of the American West? The biogeographers and landscape ecologists in this collection examine the balance between the natural and cultural histories of fire in the western United States, developing a complex picture of this prehistoric ecology with implications for policies involving the management of natural areas today.



Alianor True, ed. Wildfire: A Reader. Washington, DC: Island Press, 2001. (General Interest)

This collection of stories and essays documents the shifting thinking about and attitudes toward wildfire in North America. From Native American origin myths to the pioneering ecological works of John Muir and Aldo Leopold to the contemporary understandings of naturalists and firefighters, the selections
illuminate the changing relationship between fire and the natural and cultural landscapes. Once considered a destructive force to be avoided or suppressed, today there is a greater understanding of the beneficial effects and rightful place of fire in the environment.



Elliott A. Norse. Ancient forests of the Pacific Northwest. Washington, DC: Island Press, 1990. (Natural Environment)


Ancient forests have their own unique characteristics and issues. The cycles of their ecosystems can operate on scales of thousands of years, and while fires are infrequent, they have still shaped the lives of these forests. Fire suppression has increased the risk of catastrophic fires, and this activity is only one of the many pressures that humanity has placed on these forests, putting their future at risk. Elliott Norse provides a comprehensive look at the lives of these forests and details sustainable management policies that would preserve them while providing for the economic livelihood of the region.


Reed F. Noss, ed. The Redwood Forest: History, Ecology, and Conservation of the Coast Redwoods. Washington, DC: 2000. (California & the West)

The Save-the-Redwoods League is a national nonprofit conservation organization founded in 1918 to protect the redwood of California, to foster a better understanding of the value of America's primeval forests, and to support conservation of forests. This work describes the scientific basis for the League's current Master Plan for the Redwoods, a set of long-range, multi-layered forest preservation policies. Drawing on recent scientific findings, advances in comptuer technology, and need assessment techniques, it presents the functioning of redwood forests in a new light.



Constance Best and Laurie A. Wayburn. America's Private Forests. Washington, DC: Island Press, 2001. (Natural Environment)


While public forest management is undoubtedly significant, 58% of the forests in this country are privately owned, and their viability is threatened by population growth, development, fragmentation, as well as historic fire suppression policies. The authors of this book are the co-founders of The Pacific Forest Trust, a conservation organization dedicated to enhancing, restoring, and preserving private, productive forestland, with a primary focus in the Pacific Northwest. The Trust believes that maintaining long-term, ecologically based productivity is the key to forest preservation, and this work offers recommendations for enhancing the conservation, restoration, and sustainable management of private forestland.



David B. Lindenmayer and Jerry F. Franklin, eds. Towards Forest Sustainability. Washington, DC: Island Press, 2003


Worldwide, there are increasing societal demands for the management of stable or declining forests so as to sustain biological diversity and higher levels of ecological services as well as the production of commodities. This collection of essays focuses on that transition to the ecologically sustainable management of forests in the developed temperate regions of the world from the perspective of forest ecologists and managers in the United States, Canada, Finland, Sweden, Australia, and New Zealand. They describe the changes that have taken place, emphasizing what has worked, what hasn't, and the lessons they have learned. The editors of this volume also co-wrote Conserving Forest Biodiversity, a detailed and comprehensive review of biodiversity and forest management strategies.




08 October 2008

36th annual NCIBA Fall Trade Show




Over the weekend, your librarian attended the trade show of the Northern California Independent Booksellers Association - a Thoreau Center tenant who kindly invited me to come along. The NCIBA is a trade organization dedicated to supporting, nurturing and promoting independent retail bookselling in California, and there were plenty of booksellers, publishers, sales reps, and authors there - nearly a hundred exhibitors according to my show program, but they might have a more precise number for you. Of particular interest was that almost every publisher, no matter how big or small and regardless of focus had at least one book about green living or eating or construction or something along those lines. The library received some book donations from Cypress House, Lost Coast Press, Algonquin Books, Bloomsbury Press, Earthscan, and Tachyon Publications, and made some friendly connections with other local publishers. Congratulations to NCIBA. More pictures:



01 October 2008

New Addition - Antarctica: The Global Warning

AntarcticaThe library recently received several copies of the sumptuously photographed Antarctica: The Global Warning by Sebastian Copland and published by Earth Aware Editions. It even comes with a DVD. From the publisher:
The fate of Antarctica foretells the fate of the Earth. For more than fifty years, research scientists have studied the frozen continent and its threatened and endangered creatures, including the chinstrap penguins, humpback whales and albatross. The stark yet fragile icy realm may sound our last warning before the impending destruction of the environment.

Sebastian Copeland, an award-winning photographer and environmental activist, witnessed the accelerated devastation of the Antarctica ice shelf while aboard the research vessel Ice Lady Patagonia on behalf of Global Green. He uncovered both the awesome beauty of Antarctica and the alarming warning made visible through his lens. Here he shares images of not only otherworldly glaciers, fields and fjords but also clear signs of massive inroads that climate change has made on the continent. Antarctica features Copeland’s presentation of scientific data and personal insights about climate change including how and why the Polar Regions, north and south, continue to melt at an increasingly rapid pace

SB375, SB1XX, SB974 - last minute legislation

Also in the Chronicle, Gov. Schwarzenegger signed bills to coordinate local planning measures to control sprawl in an effort to combat global warming, and to approve bond funds for water storage, levee improvement, and conservation projects, but he vetoed a measure that would have set a $60 per container fee on shipping traffic at the state's ports in Oakland, Long Beach and Los Angeles. The money would have been used to clean up truck and ship emissions.

New environmental report on the Hetch Hetchey system



The San Francisco Chronicle today reports on a new environmental study released by the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission for the proposed projects to upgrade the century-old water system that travels 167 miles and crosses five active fault lines to deliver water to the San Francisco Bay Area. The study recommends limiting additional water diversions from the threatened Tuolumne River ecosystem over the next decade and committing the region to expanded water recycling, groundwater development, and water conservation. The SFPUC will have a hearing Oct. 30 to decide whether to formally accept the report.

30 September 2008

George Perkins Marsh


The Library of Congress' American Memory Today in History site celebrated the anniversary of Congressman George Perkins Marsh's address in 1847 to the Agricultural Society of Rutland County, which expressed a number of ideas central to the growing American conservation movement. He would later also write the influential book, Man and Nature. We don't have a copy, but you can download it from the nearby Internet Archive. If you haven't discovered it already, the Library of Congress has a fantastic presentation of historical resources related to the evolution of the conservation movement at http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/amrvhtml/conshome.html where you can learn about Marsh, Henry David Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and much more.

Welcome


Welcome to our library blog, here to help keep you, our patrons and other friends, informed of anything happening in, with, at, or to the Whole Earth Library. That will mostly be highlighting new additions to the collection from generous donors, as well as any exciting events and activities we host in the future. We'll also try to post about goings on around us at the Thoreau Center and the Presidio, interesting things on the web that relate to theme of our library, and anything else that strikes our fancy. Please feel free to stop by the back of building 1016 for a visit sometime.