Michigan's Venice

Michigan's Venice The Transformation of the St. Clair Maritime Landscape, 1640-2000

Hardback (31 May 2024)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Few maritime landscapes in the Great Lakes remain so deeply and clearly inscribed by successive cultures as the St. Clair system—a river, delta, and lake found between Lake Huron and the Detroit River. The St. Clair River and its environs are an age-old transportation nexus of land and water routes, a strategic point of access to maritime resources, and, in many ways, a natural impediment to the navigation of the Great Lakes. From Indigenous peoples and European colonizers to the modern nations of Canada and the United States, this work traces the region's transformation through culturally driven practices and artifacts of shipbuilding, navigation, place naming, and mapmaking. In this novel approach to maritime landscape archaeology, author Daniel F. Harrison unifies historiography, linguistics, ethnohistory, geography, and literature through the analysis of primary sources, material culture, and ecological and geographic data in a technique he calls "evidence-based storytelling." Viewed over time, the region forms a microcosm of the interplay of environment, culture, and technology that characterized the gradual shift from nature to an industrial society and a built environment optimized for global waterborne transport.

Book information

ISBN: 9780814349472
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Imprint: Wayne State University Press
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 280
Weight: 534g
Height: 236mm
Width: 162mm
Spine width: 26mm