Climbers' Corner • Tree Academy
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Mesopotamia to Milwaukee: A History of City Trees
Summary
Our primate ancestorsumans have always used tree evolved in trees. As the rain forests of Africa dried and
became savannas our ancestors were forced to adapt to more open conditions, but
were never far from trees, using them for shelter, tools, food and fuel. Agriculture brought permanent communities and
a desire to bring trees into these communities.
Use was primarily for food and other products, the exception being aesthetic
use in gardens of the elites. As
settlements grew from villages to walled cities and to larger cities without
walls, tree use changed as well. Trees and gardens came to be regarded as less
utilitarian and more ornamental, especially in the more affluent classes. The shift from living on the land to living
in cities by most of the world’s population has further changed the value of
trees to encompass not only aesthetics and utility, but social and
environmental values. Paralleling the
emergence of the modern city has been the emergence of arboriculture and urban
forestry as science based disciplines to manage urban trees, forests and other
urban green space. As the human
population continues to expand and migrate into cities, as the global economy
expands, and as the climate changes; the challenges to and opportunities for
arboriculture and urban forestry will be unprecedented.
Conference Proceedings Documents
Presenters
Robert W. Miller is Emeritus Professor of Urban Forestry
from the University
of Wisconsin – Stevens
Point (UWSP). During his 29 years at
UWSP he developed the curriculum and supporting courses for their Urban
Forestry Program. Miller has published
numerous papers in professional and scientific journals and is the author of
the book “Urban Forestry: Planning and Managing Urban Greenspaces.” Miller, Dr.
Richard Hauer and Dr. Les Werner from UWSP recently completed a third edition of
the book. Miller holds a BS and MS in
Forestry from West Virginia University and a PhD in Forestry from the
University of Massachusetts. Miller
retired from the University in 2002 and currently resides in Oriental, NC. Currently Miller is chair of the Oriental
Tree Board, member of the North Carolina Urban Forest Council Board, member of
the Science and Technology Committee for the Albemarle-Pamlico National Estuary
Program, and a part time urban forestry and arboriculture consultant.
Climbers' Corner • Tree Academy
Monday • Tuesday • Wednesday