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NOTES I. READING THE LANDSCAPE 1. Leo Marx, The Machine in the Garden: Technology and the Pastoral Ideal in America (New York: Oxford University Press, 1967). 2. Duane A. Smith, Mining America: The Industry and the Environment , 1800-1980. 3. Kevin Lynch, The Image ofthe City. 4. Frances Downing and Thomas Hubka, "Diagramming: A Visual Language ," in Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture, II, ed. Camille Wells (Columbia : Univerity of Missouri Press, 1986), pp. 44-52. 5. Emil W. Billeb, Mining Camp Days, p. 4. 6. Christopher Davies, "Dark Inner Landscapes: The South Wales Coalfield ," Landscape Journal 3/1 (Spring 1984): 38-39. 7. William Ralston Balch, The Mines, Miners, and Mining Interests of the United States in 1882, p. 782. 8. Mrs. Hugh Brown, Lady in Boomtown: Miners and Manners on the Nevada Frontier, p. 126. 9. Richard V. Francaviglia, "Copper Mining and Landscape Evolution: A Century of Change in the Warren Mining District, Arizona," Journal ofArizona History 23/3 (Autumn 1982): 287. 10. Mack H. Gillenwater, "Cultural and Historical Geography of Mining Settlements in the Pocahontas Coal Field of Southern West Virginia, 1880 to 1930," p. iii. 11. Barbara Bailey, Main Street Northeastern Oregon: The Founding and Development ofSmall Towns (Portland: Oregon Historical Society, 1982), and Randall Rohe, "The Geography and Material Culture of the Western Mining Town," Material Culture 16/3 (Fall 1984): 99-120. 12. Duane A. Smith, Rocky Mountain Mining Camps: The Urban Frontier. 13. Richard V. Francaviglia, "Mining Town Commercial Vernacular Architecture : The 'Overhanging Porches' of Ohio's Hocking Mining District," Pioneer America Society Transactions 13 (1990): 50. 2 1 8 NOT EST 0 P AGE 5 36-69 14. Richard Longstreth, The Buildings ofMain Street: A Guide to American Commercial Architecture. 15. Deborah Lyn Randall, "Park City, Utah: An Architectural History of Mining Town Housing, 1869-1907." 16. Eugene J. Palka, "The Cultural Landscape of the Athens County Coal Region: A Reflection of Its Mining Activities from 1885-1927." 17. Robert H. Richards, Charles Locke, and John Bray, A Text Book of Ore Dressing, p. 412. 18. Donald Hardesty, The Archaeology of Mining and Miners: A View from the Silver State, pp. 18-66. 19. John Hays Hammond, "The Milling of Gold Ores in California," in Eighth Annual Report ofthe State Mineralogist, pp. 696-735. 20. Richards et aI., A Text Book ofOre Dressing, p. 415. 21. A. J. Wallis-Tayler, Aerial or Wire Rope-Ways: Their Construction and Management. 22. Richard V. Francaviglia, "The Cemetery as an Evolving Cultural Landscape," Annals of the Association ofAmerican Geographers 61/3 (1971): 501-509. 23. Gillenwater, "Cultural and Historical Geography of Mining Settlements ." 24. Hardesty, The Archaeology ofMining and Miners, pp. 9, 11-12 (quotation on p. 11). 25. David M. Gradwohl and Nancy M. Osborn, Exploring Buried Buxton: Archaeology of an Abandoned Iowa Coal Mining Town with a Large Black Population, p. 5. 2. INTERPRnlNG THE LANDSCAPE 1. David Lowenthal and Hugh Prince, "English Landscape Tastes," Geographical Review 55 (June 1965): 191-220. 2. Donald H. McLaughlin, "Man's Selective Attack on Ores and Minerals," in Man's Role in Changing the Face ofthe Earth, ed. William L. Thomas, Jr., p.860. 3. Georgius Agricola, De re metallica, Herbert Hoover and Lou Hoover, p.14. 4. Spiro Kostof, America by Design, pp. 88-89. 5. Mrs. Hugh Brown, Lady in Boomtown: Miners and Manners on the Nevada Frontier, p. 28. 6. Stanley A. Kuzara, Black Diamonds ofSheridan: A Facet ofWyoming History. 7. Leonard J. Arrington, Great Basin Kingdom: An Economic History of the Latter-Day Saints (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1958), pp. 241-243. [18.222.10.9] Project MUSE (2024-04-20 04:00 GMT) NOT EST 0 P AGE 5 69-86 219 8. Page Smith, As a City upon a Hill: The Town in American History (New York: Knopf, 1966). 9. William Ralston Balch, The Mines, Miners, and Mining Interests of the United States in 1882, p. 769. 10. Ibid., p. 783. 11. Off-Hand Sketches: A Companion for the Tourist and Traveller over the Philadelphia, Pottsville, and Reading Railroad, Describing the Scenery, Improvements, Mineral and Agricultural Resources, Historical Incidents, and Other Subjects ofInterest in the Vicinity ofthe Route (Philadelphia: J. W. Moore, 1854), p. 53. 12. Ibid., p. 90. 13. A. Dudley Gardner and Vera R. Flores, Forgotten Frontier: A History ofWyoming Coal Mining, pp. 1-32. 14. David F. Myrick, The Railroads of Arizona, vol. 1, The Southern Roads, pp. 177-254. 15. David F. Myrick, The Railroads of Nevada...

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