http://dash.harvard.edu/handle/1/13070077

Changing Climates: Deserts, Desiccation, and the Rise of Climate
Engineering, 1870-1950

Changing Climates: Deserts, Desiccation, and the Rise of Climate
Engineering, 1870-1950

Author:Lehmann, Philipp Nicolas

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Files:Lehmann_gsas.harvard.inactive_0084L_11727.pdf (21.66Mb; PDF)

Abstract:

This dissertation examines the impact of the nineteenth-century discussions
about climate change and desiccation on large engineering projects in
desert regions between 1870 and 1950. It demonstrates that the debate over
the variability of global climatic conditions was a product of both
internal academic and transnational political developments, and that the
perceived threat of advancing desert conditions found a popular and
technocratic expression in climate engineering designs. Against the
background of new theories about the earth's geological history, the
development of academic geography, the travels of Sahara explorers, and
imperialism in North Africa, European geographers and geologists initiated
an enduring discussion on the origin of desert environments and the
question of large-scale climatic changes in the recent past and present.
Using a wide array of evidence ranging from cave paintings found in the
interior Sahara and classical travel accounts to modern meteorological
data, scientists debated whether North Africa, the entire continent, or
even the whole world were undergoing desiccation. While the lack of a
widely-accepted causal mechanism behind large climatic changes meant that
the academic debate remained unresolved by the beginning of the twentieth
century, images of progressing desert conditions had already left the
confines of academia, heightening public anxiety over the possibility of
future climatic catastrophes on a global scale. From the early stages of
the nineteenth-century debate on climate change, fears of desiccation
inspired scientists and engineers to come up with solutions to detrimental
climatic shifts, whether these were viewed as man-made or natural. The
resulting climate engineering projects were an expression of environmental
pessimism paired with a powerful technological optimism. This was apparent
in French and British schemes in the late nineteenth century that aimed to
flood large parts of the Sahara and effect wide-ranging climatic changes;
in the plan of a German architect to engineer a geographically and
climatically transformed new Euro-African continent in the 1920s; and
eventually in Nazi designs to Germanize and green the "desertified" areas
of Eastern Europe and Central Asia.

Citable link to this page:

http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:13070077

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