Routes of power : energy and modern America / Christopher F. Jones.
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780674728899
- 0674728890
- 9780674970922
- 0674970926
- Energy policy -- United States -- History
- Energy development -- United States -- History
- Power resources -- United States -- History
- Energy consumption -- United States -- History
- Transportation -- United States -- History
- Energieversorgungsnetz
- Energieversorgung
- Strukturwandel
- USA
- Energy consumption
- Energy development
- Energy policy
- Power resources
- Transportation
- United States
- 333.790973 23
- HD9502.U52 J658 2014
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Odessa College Stacks | 333.7909 J76R (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 51994001711599 |
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
Coal's liquid pathways -- The anthracite energy transition -- Pennsylvania's petroleum boom -- Pipelines and power -- Taming the Susquehanna River -- The electrification of America.
The fossil fuel revolution is usually rendered as a tale of historic advances in energy production. In this perspective-changing account, Christopher F. Jones instead tells a story of advances in energy access--canals, pipelines, and wires that delivered power in unprecedented quantities to cities and factories at a great distance from production sites. He shows that in the American mid-Atlantic region between 1820 and 1930, the construction of elaborate transportation networks for coal, oil, and electricity unlocked remarkable urban and industrial growth along the eastern seaboard. But this new transportation infrastructure did not simply satisfy existing consumer demand--it also whetted an appetite for more abundant and cheaper energy, setting the nation on a path toward fossil fuel dependence. Between the War of 1812 and the Great Depression, low-cost energy supplied to cities through a burgeoning delivery system allowed factory workers to mass-produce goods on a scale previously unimagined. It also allowed people and products to be whisked up and down the East Coast at speeds unattainable in a country dependent on wood, water, and muscle. But an energy-intensive America did not benefit all its citizens equally. It provided cheap energy to some but not others; it channeled profits to financiers rather than laborers; and it concentrated environmental harms in rural areas rather than cities. Today, those who wish to pioneer a more sustainable and egalitarian energy order can learn valuable lessons from this history of the nation's first steps toward dependence on fossil fuels.--Publisher description.
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