All Possible Worlds A ll Possible Worlds FOURTH E D IT IO N G e o f f r e y J. M a r t in New York Oxford OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 2005 The optimist proclaims that we live in the best o f all possible worlds; and the pessimist fears this is true. -James Branch Cabell, The Silver Stallion CONTE NTS Figures ix Preface xii Acknowledgm ents xvi 1 A Field o f Study Called Geography / 1 PART 1 C L A S S I C A L / 11 2 The Beginnings of Classical Geography / 13 3 Geography in the M iddle Ages / 39 4 The Age o f Exploration / 61 5 The Impact o f Discoveries / 85 6 An End and a Beginning: Alexander von Humboldt and Carl Ritter ! 107 PART 2 M O D E R N / 129 7 W hat Was New? / 131 8 The New Geography in Germany / 162 9 The New Geography in France / 195 10 The New Geography in Great Britain / 213 11 The New Geography in Russia, the Soviet Union, and the Com m onwealth of Independent States / 248 12 The New Geography in Canada l 279 13 The New Geography in Sweden / 301 14 The New Geography in Japan / 323 15 The New Geography in the United States Before World War I / 338 16 The New Geography in the United States: World War I to M idcentury / 382 vn viii / Contents 17 The New Geography in the United States: M idcentury to the Present / 414 18 Applied Geography / 448 19 New M ethods of Observation and Analysis / 475 20 Innovation and Tradition / 498 Index o f N am es 539 Index o f Subjects 589 FIGURES Figure 1 Troy 16 Figure 2 Tower of the Winds 17 Figure 3 The world according to Ptolemy, according to Hecataeus, and according to Eratosthenes 20 Figure 4 Greek exploration, 470-310 24 . . b c Figure 5 Calculation of the Earth’s circumference (by Eratosthenes) 32 Figure 6 T -0 maps 42 Figure 7 Travels of Marco Polo 44 Figure 8 A Portolano chart of the Mediterranean (after Juan de la Cosa, 1500) 47 Figure 9 Early Chinese explorers 55 Figure 10 The Age of Discovery, Bartholomew’s polar projection (the Muslim world from the eighth to twelfth centuries; Columbus; Vasco da Gama; Magellan; Cook) 62 Figure 11 The Treaty of Tordesillas 69 Figure 12 Apian’s heart-shaped world, 1530 75 Figure 13 Outline of Mercator’s world map, 1538 76 Figure 14 Outline of Mercator’s world map, 1569 78 Figure 15 The Cassini survey changes the position of the French coastline 81 Figure 16 Drawings adapted from Sir John Mandeville 89 Figure 17 Alexander von Humboldt 108 Figure 18 Carl Ritter 109 Figure 19 Humboldt’s travels in Europe and Russia 111 Figure 20 Humboldt’s travels in the Americas 112 Figure 21 Isotherms of average annual temperature, 1845, according to Humboldt 118 Figure 22 Maury’s model of atmospheric circulation 146 Figure 23 Maury’s wind chart of the tropical Atlantic Ocean, 1859 147 Figure 24 Group of all members of the Hayden Survey, In camp at Red Buttes, junction of the North Platte and Sweetwater Rivers 152 IX x / Figures Figure 25 Geological exploration of the Fortieth Parallel in the King Survey 152 Figure 26 Lieutenant Wheeler, U.S. Engineer, camp and scientific party near Belmont, Nevada 153 Figure 27 The Powell party, Sweetwater County, Wyoming, May 1871 153 Figure 28 Koppen’s generalized continent 181 Figure 29a E. de Martonne in the field, Romania, 1937 204 Figure 29b E. de Martonne with Robert Ficheux 204 Figure 30 H. J. Mackinder 216 Figure 31 Mackinder’s world island 217 Figure 32 Herbertson’s major natural regions 221 Figure 33 Fawcett’s provinces of England 228 Figure 34 A landscape sketch by W. M. Davis: “Looking eastward down the normal early-mature valley of Fourmile Creek” 351 Figure 35 The transcontinental excursion, 1912 354 Figure 36 Regional diagram in the eastern Cordillera of Peru 360 Figure 37 Regional diagram of the deep canyon regions of the Apurimac 361 Figure 38 Ellsworth Huntington counting Sequoia rings with Henry Canby 363 Figure 39 William Morris Davis and Preston E. James attend a meeting at Clark University in the 1920s 389 Figure 40 A portion of the Montfort area 398 Figure 41 The committee appointed to design American Geography: Inventory and Prospect 406 Figure 42 M. W. Dow building “Geographers on Film” (1979) 430 Figure 43 Executive Directors of the AAG: Ronald F. Abler (1989-2002) and Douglas Richardson (2003- ) 432 Figure 44 The American Geographical Society staff, June 1956 432 Figure 45 Sesquicentennial of The American Geographical Society: Director, Mary Lynne Bird, 2002 433 Figure 46 Delegates participating in the Eighth International Geographical Congress aboard a Chicago horse-drawn sightseeing coach 435 Figure 47 Delegates at the 17th Congress of the International Geographical Union, 1952, Washington, D.C. 435 Figure 48 The International Geographical Congress, 1992, Washington, D.C.: Initiating an institutional history of the Congresses 436 Figures / xi Figure 49 U.S.-U.S.S.R. field trip, Lake Baikal, Siberia, 1983 438 Figure 50 Territorial specialists (and others) meet with General Le Ronde at the Paris Peace Conference, 1918-1919 453 Figure 51 Areal coverage of land classification maps in Michigan, July 1939 456 Figure 52 Areas of the United States reported by area analysis method 461 Figure 53 The Prime Meridian (Greenwich, London) 479 Figure 54 Planet Earth 483 Figure 55 Relation of population to rainfall in Nebraska 486 Figure 56 Diagram of concepts 517 Figure 57 The generalized pattern of habitats 519 PREFACE The history of geography constitutes an investigation into the way in which geographic subject matter was recognized, perceived, thought about, and evaluated over the course of centuries. Ideas evolved; some were correct, some were errone ous, but all were part of a long-developing body of ideas that helped humankind comprehend its surroundings. Out of this, a discipline and profession evolved. This pattern emerged in several countries, each independent of the other, until recent times, when ease of transport and circulation of the written and spoken word has facili tated the exchange of ideas. Each national geography has its own necessities, and each country produces its own sages, each with his or her own inimitable point of view that naturally influences students. Nevertheless, since approximately the middle of the nineteenth century an ever-increasing exchange of thought has taken place that permits inter national recognition of a geographical point of view. The history of this point of view is offered as an account of the successive images scholars have developed con cerning arrangements and patterns on the face of the earth. Long before the dawn of written history, men who explored even just a short distance from home were aware of differences that distinguished one place from another. The concept of areal differentiation had been bom. Some people were drawn to the challenge of form ing mental images of what it was like beyond the horizon and communicating these images to others. The differentiation of the face of the earth is what John K. Wright called “geodiversity.” This is what geography is all about. How can a mental image of geodiversity be formed with sufficient clarity so that it can be communicated to others? What things are combined in different places on the earth to produce the complex characteristics of the world's landscapes? In the first place, the world is much larger than humans are, and on its curved surface our range of vision is narfowly restricted. Most of the fields of study in modem science seek to form mental images of things and events that are much too small to observe directly; but to form a mental image of a world that is too big to see, it is necess ary to generalize, to select certain features to build into the image, and to reject other features as irrelevant. Furthermore, no coherent image of our world could be put together unless the observed features are located in relation to a known point. One of the distinctive characteristics of a geographer is a consistent concern about the relative location of things. Along with the formation of a mental image of geodiversity, however, has existed our need to explain it. Scholars formulated many different explanations to make the mental images seem plausible or acceptable. Their explanations, in turn, often deter mined the features they chose to observe. Scholars developed ideas concerning X ll Preface / xiii sequences of events, or processes of change, that satisfied the need to understand; they also sought and found mathematical regularities separate from the processes of change that nevertheless satisfied the urge to explain the image of geodiversity. The mental images and explanations of one generation seldom were satisfactory to succeeding generations. There has been a continued search for new and more perfect images and for explanations that accord with contemporary beliefs. These changing images and the theoretical structures established to give them plausibility provide us with the content of the history of geographical ideas. There are certain built-in biases that should be recognized at the start. The text embraces the whole sweep of the history of ideas from the viewpoint of this time and looks at different nations of the world from the United States of America; inevi tably the view is foreshortened. Much attention is given to the twentieth century and to a consideration of geographical ideas in America. However, the existence of scholars in other times has not been ignored, nor have the geographical ideas and developments of the non-Western world been overlooked. THE CLASSICAL AND TH E MODERN PERIODS Two major periods are defined. The first period extends for thousands of years from the shadowy beginnings of geographical thought to the year 1859. This is the classical period, during which relatively little attention was paid to the definition of separate fields of study. This was the period when the world’s knowledge was not so great that a scholar could not become master of it. So it is that almost every Greek philosopher, often listed as a historian in the history books, may with equal justification be called a geographer. Even in the eighteenth century, when the sep aration of fields of study had begun, there existed scholars such as Benjamin Franklin, M. V. Lomonosov, and Montesquieu who are usually not known as geo graphers but nevertheless are important links in the history of geographical ideas. The last person who could claim universal scholarship, however, was Alexander von Humboldt; after his death, no one could attain the preeminence in the world of scholarship Humboldt had been able to reach. The year 1859 functions as a significant divide: Humboldt’s death was accompanied by that of Carl Ritter. Alfred Hettner was bom, as was Darwin’s Origin o f Species. What we call the classical period is discussed in Chapters 2 through 6. The modem period began in the latter part of the nineteenth century. It is dis tinguished by the appearance of the professional field called geography—that is, a field of study in which trained students could earn a living by being geographers. To create a professional field, three conditions had to be satisfied. First, there had to be a body of concepts or images that was accepted by the members of a pro fession, as well as an accepted way of asking questions and seeking answers. In other words, there had to be a model of professional behavior. Second, no such model could be formulated or passed on to later generations of scholars until there were societies, associations, periodicals, and departments of geography in universities offer ing advanced training in concepts and methods. Third, graduate departments of geo graphy could not develop until paying jobs existed for students who had earned advanced degrees from these departments. But when all three conditions were met,
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