Where Water Flows: The Rivers of Arizona

by Lawrence Clark Powell

12 Members (4.00)

On This Page

Description

If there were one key to the Southwest history and culture, it might well be the river systems of the region," writes Lawrence Clark Powell in his prologue. Concentrating on seven major waterways in Arizona, Powell illustrates the truth of his statement with a multitude of significant facts and ideas about the geography, history, and literature surrounding these rivers. Along with photographer Michael Collier and pilot Christopher Condit, Powell made aerial surveys in a Cesna 170 to gain a show more better perspective of the contours of Arizona's river valleys. The twenty-four color photographs provide an unusual map-like overview of dams, canyons, reservoirs, and the rivers themselves. As Powell says, "From the air, history looks far different than from the library." Exploration of rivers was done on the ground, too; and along the way, persons such as sculptor John Waddell, solar architect Reynold Radoccia, and writer-rancher Eulalia Bourne were encountered. Many dusty roads and trails were traveled in the search for headwaters, and some interesting and humorous tales result from encounters with various uniformed individuals. Towns and cities are seen in terms of the impact that rivers had on their inception and growth, and an understanding of how water-flow shapes human destiny becomes more apparent as each river is carefully observed. It is an ancient truth that man goes where water flows, and the early people who settle the Southwest were no exception. For the Hohokam, the Spaniards, and for contemporary populations in every part of Arizona, water has been and continues to be a crucial fact of life. How man has used water has been even more critical. Those with historical knowledge of the world's deserts that ultimately it is fatal for man to urbanize a fragile environment. Today, urban and agricultural Arizona as drawing on their water supply faster than it is being replaced, and the state's years as an artificially verdant desert are numbered. Where Water Flows offers no ready-made salvation formulas; it is in the end, a "lament and a farewell, as well as a thanksgiving for those fruitful years when the rains fell and the rivers ran and the desert bloomed." show less

Tags

Member Reviews

Members

Recently Added By

Author Information

Picture of author.
120+ Works 1,051 Members

Common Knowledge

Important places
Arizona, USA
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, Travel, Science & Nature
DDC/MDS
333.91Society, government, & cultureEconomicsEconomics of land and energyOther natural resourcesWater energy - Hydrologic
LCC
TC424 .A6 .P68TechnologyHydraulic engineering. Ocean engineeringHydraulic engineeringRiver, lake, and water-supply engineering

Statistics

Members
12
Popularity
1,882,505
Rating
(4.00)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
1