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Product details
File Size: 5824 KB
Print Length: 288 pages
Publisher: Riverhead Books; Reprint edition (February 6, 2007)
Publication Date: February 6, 2007
Sold by: Penguin Group (USA) LLC
Language: English
ASIN: B000SEGZN4
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Colin VinhMrs. ReddyEnglish 12 CP Period 422 March 2019Rediscovering the Lost Mountain The nonfiction novel Lost Mountain was written by Erik Reece and published by Riverhead Books. Reece writes about his experience with radical strip mining, mountaintop removal and its negative environmental effects. He details his year long account from September 2003 to September 2004, and how the Lost Mountain in Kentucky was destroyed for coal mining purposes. The summit which he had previously climbed once a month, exploring its routes and streams, was gone. Throughout his journey, he explains how incessant human greed caused the Lost Mountain to now exist as a ghost of its former self on topographic maps of Perry County, Kentucky. Reece delivers his accounts of the animals, trees, and people in the utter annihilation of the richest ecosystem in North America. One of the most telling signs of the Lost Mountain’s ecosystem being destroyed is in the accounts of Reece’s spring excursions in the Appalachia. During the cerulean warbler’s breeding season, Reece hiked with Patricia Hartman, a young ornithologist who studies the warbler, into Buffalo Branch, a 3600 acre woodlot. He explains that the warbler’s summer breeding ground is being devastated by coal miners, who use the birds to detect odorless methane gas from coal in the underground shafts. Sadly, the number of warblers are dwindling due to the invasion of the coal industry. Like many of Reece’s later accounts in the novel, they all accurately depict the belligerent domination of greed motivated coal mining. Another pivotal point in the Lost Mountain’s destruction is December 2003, where Reece highlights the decline of the wood rat, another species inhabiting the Appalachian mountain area. Earlier in the fall season, he had been looking around the area for signs of the wood rats, encountering a dangerous copperhead in the dense vegetation. This chapter is the turning point for the ecosystem on and around the Lost Mountain. After three months, Reece climbs the same ridgeline and gets a view full of mining equipment. The loud sounds and debris from machinery including bulldozers and trucks fills the air, providing a stark contrast of the beautiful nature and animals that previously populated the area. Bulldozers have already carved out a path leading to the three coal seams that lie beneath the Lost Mountain, and the destruction of the environment has already begun. The main themes in the Lost Mountain are the negative impacts of human greed and the destruction it causes on the environment and people. In later chapters, Reece investigates the effects that the mountaintop removal has had on the people in human populated areas of Kentucky. The residue and waste produced from the mining efforts have been reported to seep into water supplies and raise water toxicity levels for neighboring towns. Air pollution is another huge factor that has trapped people inside their homes. In the Corinth Baptist Church, Reverend Peake describes the sunken condition of the church and apparent water damage due to mining. Surrounding residents have developed serious cases of bronchitis and asthma, with older residents suffering the most. Coal mining industries such as TECO use explosives in order to easily access coal veins, which caused much debris and flooding to ruin the house and garden which Debra and Granville Burke lived in. The accumulation of dust and destruction of the Burkes’ garden caused Granville to take her life out of frustration and overwhelming burdens. These examples are a small look into the huge scale of mining and its impacts on the environment, but important enough that change must happen soon. Reece had originally come to the three hundred million year old mountain to be inspired by the diverse wildlife and beautiful nature. However, in the course of one year, he was faced with the destruction of the biological community surrounding the Lost Mountain. Many are in opposition of the blatant unregulated use of Earth’s natural resources, but Reece emphasizes that such a mindset would only guarantee a terrible future for humans and animals alike. I also agree with this perspective, and uphold the fact that as we continue to live our lives without care for nature, the world will soon run out of resources to sustain anyone. The greed of major mining corporations and industries has run rampant throughout history and remains unchecked to this day due to the allure of huge financial profits to be made from extracting the Earth’s natural resources. Reece concludes that the nation should value community and the wellness of nature over technology and wealth. From the beginning of his time with the Lost Mountain to the end, Reece wishes that our progressive society would take a step back and change our attitude towards the value of nature and its important role in our lives. I would highly recommend this book to anyone willing to learn more about how the destruction of the environment plays such a huge role in how we conduct our lives. From my perspective, we have lost touch with our empathy and since we live in areas where we do not experience firsthand the negative effects of strip mining. This book served as a wake up call to actively fight against the greed of mining industries and convert to more renewable forms of energy to use in our own daily lives.
Erik Reece's "Lost Mountain" is a metaphor as well as the actual name of a mountain. This is his story for a year in eastern Kentucky as the mountain "is removed."This is not just another tale of woe about Big Coal, about coal mining or about mining in general. Reece knows that mining is here to stay, whether it is coal, copper, iron, nickel or bauxite.The focus here is on a special type of mining: mountaintop removal and valley fills. This type of mining came into being in the early 1990's when massive, powerful equipment and the technology to support it made this type of mining possible.This type of mining has the capability to destroy the topography of planet Earth. Our descendants, hundreds and thousands of years from now will still be living with the effects of mountain top removal and valley fills.The fact that the central and southern Appalachian Mountains are for now, the mountain range most affected by this type of mining holds a special irony. The Appalachians are one of the oldest mountain ranges on earth. The mix of flora and fauna has evolved over a long period of time. A rich mix of species includes more species of salamander, more species of bats, birds, butterflies, fish than any other place in the United States.Mountain top removal and valley fills destroy the land. Trees and vegetation get stripped and removed. The rich,layered soil gets dumped, along with broken-up rock into ravines and valleys where it blocks springs, intermittent streams, vernal pools and bogs. Watersheds and drainage patterns are destroyed. The complex ecological structure that took so long to evolve and which provides different ecological niches that support many different species can be destroyed after a day of mountain top removal.It will take centuries and millenia for land so damaged to emerge. Until then, only the very roughest species of flora and fauna can tolerate such poor conditions, a much-narrowed spectrum of life-forms.Read Erik Reece's book and get mad. And then do something about it. This type of mining needs to be stopped.
This book was articulate and well researched. It piqued my interest in issues relevant to the Appalachians where I have recently moved.
Reece puts you right there on a mountain before, during, and after it has been demolished for all time. He lets you in on conversations with people on both sides of the issue of mountaintop removal coal mining. Lost Mountain is well written, and I think it would be fascinating to anyone who loves planet Earth, our beloved mountains, and all the plants and wildlife who live there. Another reviewer of this book, a professional in the industry, makes some good points, but just doesn't get it when it comes to "property rights". Read this book and decide for yourself how you feel about permanently trading our ancient Appalachian mountains for corporate profits and a few temporary jobs.
Read this for a business class - pretty sad really - does a good job to describe the destruction and ecological damage being perpetrated to extract coal in Appalachia.
excellent education about what is REALLY being done to our mountains nd the people who live there ! A Must read for anyone on the planet who cares about our future !
I read this book for a college class, and loved it. Beware, though...you will probably be very angry at the whole situation by the time you are through reading. Reece does a great job of creating a riveting, edge of your seat story about a very touchy subject. The only question that remains is "What next?" What can we do to remedy this situation?
This makes one aware of the devastation now being wreaked on the Appalachians by "clean coal." Recommended for anyone doubting that we need to rethink our energy sources.
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