Europe's Black Triangle Turns Green. Bruce Stutz.
by Stutz, Bruce; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2006Article 51Environment. Publisher: Onearth, 2005ISSN: 1522-3205;.Subject(s): Air quality -- Standards | Environmental degradation -- Europe | Environmental policy -- Czech Republic | Environmental responsibility | Industrialization | Life expectancy | Respiratory organs -- DiseasesDDC classification: 050 Summary: "For two days it has been cold and pouring continually, but each morning the caravan of scientists rolls out from the inn on the square in the small northwestern Czech village of Horni Blatna and heads an hour north into the mountains. At the group's study site, just a few miles from the German border, the forest is full-grown Norway spruce about a hundred years old. The trees survive on the western edge of the notorious Black Triangle, the heavily industrialized region where Poland, Germany, and the Czech Republic meet. During the Communist era, this 12,000 square-mile area was one of the most polluted industrial landscapes on the face of the globe." (ONEARTH) This article illustrates how the Black Triangle region became toxic under Communist rule and discusses the efforts that have been made by "the Czech Republic, Poland, and Germany to reduce pollution" in the Black Triangle since the fall of Communism in 1989.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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High School - old - to delete | REF SIRS 2006 Environment Article 51 (Browse shelf) | Available |
Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2006.
Originally Published: Europe's Black Triangle Turns Green, Spring 2005; pp. 14-21.
"For two days it has been cold and pouring continually, but each morning the caravan of scientists rolls out from the inn on the square in the small northwestern Czech village of Horni Blatna and heads an hour north into the mountains. At the group's study site, just a few miles from the German border, the forest is full-grown Norway spruce about a hundred years old. The trees survive on the western edge of the notorious Black Triangle, the heavily industrialized region where Poland, Germany, and the Czech Republic meet. During the Communist era, this 12,000 square-mile area was one of the most polluted industrial landscapes on the face of the globe." (ONEARTH) This article illustrates how the Black Triangle region became toxic under Communist rule and discusses the efforts that have been made by "the Czech Republic, Poland, and Germany to reduce pollution" in the Black Triangle since the fall of Communism in 1989.
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