The Adirondack Chronology: One Big Local History List
by Editorial Staff
Fans of Adirondack history will want to check out the Adirondack Chronology. The Chronology is a project of the Protect the Adirondacks!'s Adirondack Research Library at the Center for the Forest Preserve in Niskayuna. The Chronology consists of a chronological listing of significant events (natural or human-made) over the years and centuries, back to prehistoric times, that have taken place directly in the Adirondacks or which directly impacted the Adirondacks. The document, available as an online pdf, stretches to more than 300 pages and covers everything from the Big Bang (15 billion years before present) to a sunspot cycle in 2012 and 2013 that is predicted to causing major impacts on global electronics. The Chronology also includes an extensive and useful bibliography of relevant sources.
The Chronology is easily searched using the pdf search function, making it one of the most important documents for Adirondack history. Here is a short description of some of the kinds fo things you'll find there from the Chronology's introduction:
The Adirondack Chronology deals with all aspects of the Adirondack region to best suggest the various causal processes at work; several examples: forest exploitation leading to forest fire, in turn leading to protective legislation; trails of the Haudenosaunee leading to roads fostering development and then protective legislation, and so on. Crucial events also often occur well outside of the Adirondack region, e.g. invention of the snowmobile, the building of coal burning plants in the Mid-West, the growth of nickel-copper smelting in the Sudbury region of Ontario, the explosion of Mt. Pinatubo in the Philippines, federal and state legislation, the introduction of the European Starling in New York City, the painting of a great picture or the writing of an inspirational poem.
The Chronology, last revised and enlarged in November 2009, is edited by Carl George, Professor of Biology, Emeritus at Union College; Richard E. Tucker of the Adirondack Research Library; and newest editor Charles C. Morrison, Conservation Advocacy Committee, Protect the Adirondacks!
The Adirondack Research Library holds the largest Adirondack collection outside the park boundaries. The library's collections include maps, periodicals, technical reports, photos, slides, video and audio tapes, and archival materials from prominent Adirondack conservationists of the 19th and 20th centuries.
Photo: The Center for the Forest Preserve, located in Niskayuna, NY, is owned and operated by Protect the Adirondacks!


1 Comments:
The Chronology is a giant index of events that have occurred over time and when you read through the list of these events it makes you want to know more about them. The range of things that have happened in the Adirondacks or that have impacted the Adirondacks are truly amazing. For people who are at the beginning of a research project, this is a handy tool for finding out when certain events occurred.
For more advanced researchers who already know the dates for major events within their subject will be interested in see other events that happened at the same time
The hard part of putting this together must be deciding which are important enough to list and which are not. This has to be a continuing struggle, particularly in relation to current or recent events.
Thanks, John, for letting the public know about this tool.
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