Who owns the "wilderness"? - Elyse Cox

347,859 views ・ 2020-10-06

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In 1903, the President of the United States
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took a three-day camping trip in California’s Yosemite Valley.
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President Theodore Roosevelt slept in a grove of towering Sequoia trees,
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camped in a snowstorm, and spent hours talking around the campfire
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with his host and guide, conservationist John Muir.
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Roosevelt famously loved the outdoors,
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but Muir had invited him there for more than just camping:
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Yosemite was in danger.
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Though Yosemite became protected land in 1864,
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the valley was still at risk for overdevelopment in 1903.
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It was at the heart of a decades-old struggle to set aside land
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for both preservation and public use—
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two goals that were much easier said than done.
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The battle over Yosemite began with the 1849 gold rush,
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when miners surged west, seeking gold in the Sierra Nevada foothills.
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In 1851, a state-sanctioned militia,
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drove the Ahwahneechee tribe from Yosemite Valley.
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Those who managed to return witnessed white settlers claiming the land,
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felling giant sequoias, and building hotels and saloons.
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In response, a small group of concerned Californians
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lobbied senator John Conness to protect the valley from private interests.
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In 1864, Congress passed Conness’ bill,
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granting the Yosemite Valley to the State of California,
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marking the first time the U.S. government brought land under public protection.
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But the management of that land remained an open question,
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one that would only become more complicated
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as more lands came under similar protection.
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Seven years later, geologist Ferdinand Hayden
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led an expedition to the Yellowstone Plateau,
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which many Native American tribes used for ceremonies, hunting, and trade.
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The expedition’s scientists and artists brought back news
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of spectacular geysers and hot springs,
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inspiring widespread support to bring Yellowstone under government protection—
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and restrict native people’s access to the land.
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However, unlike Yosemite, Yellowstone couldn’t be granted to a state—
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it was part of three U.S. territories that hadn’t become states yet.
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Instead, Congress brought Yellowstone under federal stewardship in 1872,
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creating the world’s first true National Park.
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During his presidency, Teddy Roosevelt was instrumental
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in expanding the lands under public protection.
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By 1916, there were fifteen national parks.
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But the problem of management remained unsolved,
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and maintenance of the park was handled haphazardly
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over multiple government departments.
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Straightforward tasks like building roads and hiring personnel
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required inefficient bureaucratic maneuvering.
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None of the departments had set rules for conduct in the park,
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so hunters killed park wildlife, cattle overgrazed fields,
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and visitors vandalized landmarks.
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The solution came from Canada,
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which had a highly effective centralized park service.
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In 1916, the United States established the National Park Service
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based on this model.
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To this day, the mission for the park service is comprised of two goals
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that sometimes conflict:
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to conserve the parks for the future
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and to allow the public to enjoy them.
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That’s a delicate balancing act: roads, trails, and other infrastructure
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make the parks accessible to visitors, but also alter the landscape,
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while visitors themselves can contribute to pollution, erosion,
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and damage of delicate ecosystems.
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The very history of preservation can also be at odds with this mission.
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Many parks were not, at the time of their founding,
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the uninhabited wilderness that’s become the standard for their preservation.
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Instead, many were homes or places of worship for native peoples,
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who lost access to these lands in the name of public use.
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Only recently has the National Park Service
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begun to reckon with this legacy and engage Native Americans
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in park management.
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Around the world, indigenous communities play crucial roles
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in land management and preservation.
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Today, there are thousands of national parks worldwide,
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and each must balance public use with historical and ecological preservation.
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Parks in New Zealand, Iceland, Australia, and South Africa
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have experienced severe erosion as visitor numbers have skyrocketed.
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Some, like Mu Ko Similan National Park in Thailand,
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have closed sections to tourists entirely to allow the ecosystem to recover.
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National Parks have preserved irreplaceable landscapes
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for future generations.
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They also force us to reckon with hard questions:
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what are our responsibilities to this planet, and to each other?
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