When explorer Henry Hudson arrived on the shores of Manhattan four centuries ago, he took in an island as rich in natural wonders as Yellowstone National Park. But what would he think of today鈥檚 cityscape?
The 菊花视频 (WCS) explores this question with the Mannahatta Project. The project takes its title from the name given to the island by the Leni Lenape people, Manhattan鈥檚 original settlers. It translates to 鈥渢he land of many hills.鈥 WCS ecologist Dr. Eric W. Sanderson commemorates the 400th anniversary of Hudson鈥檚 arrival in New York through a new book, , and an exhibition at the Museum of the City of New York, on view through October 13.
Using historical research and modern digital mapping techniques, Sanderson has re-created the city as it looked in September 1609鈥攆rom the forests of Times Square to the meadows of Harlem to the wetlands downtown. To achieve a very fine level of detail, he geographically matched 18th-century maps of Manhattan鈥檚 landscape to the modern cityscape, combed through historical and archaeological records, and applied modern principles of ecology and computer modeling. The project is the most detailed scientific reconstruction of an ecological landscape ever attempted.
鈥淚magine a virtual time machine that would allow you to see and hear the island鈥檚 wild nature, from chestnut forests to sandy beaches, before it was transformed by man鈥檚 increasing footprint,鈥 said Sanderson. 鈥淭he purpose of the Mannahatta Project is to foster an appreciation for the remnants of the natural world鈥攅ven in this most urban of jungles鈥攁nd inspire us to work harder to preserve wild places, here and across the globe.鈥
鈥淢annahatta is a microcosm for wild places around the world and compels us to think long and hard about the role of cities, and by extension our suburbs, towns, and rural communities, in the brave new world of 21st century nature,鈥 said WCS President and CEO Steven E. Sanderson.
This project was prepared for the New York State Department of State Office of Coastal, Local Government & Community Sustainability with funds provided under Title II of the Environmental Protection Fund. The New York City Department of Parks and Recreation was a municipal sponsor for funding under the state program. The Hudson River Estuary Program of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and the New England Interstate Water Pollution Control Commission also provided support.
Generous funding has also been received from the Prospect Hill Foundation, Inc.; Hudson River Foundation for Science and Environmental Research, Inc.; Furthermore: a program of the J.M. Kaplan Fund; Nurture New York鈥檚 Nature; the Center for Environmental Research and Conservation at Columbia University; and individual donors. Scientists and scholars from a variety of institutions in New York and elsewhere have contributed time and expertise.
The ESRI Conservation Program provided in-kind donations of geographic information system software. The website mapping interface is based on the Google Maps API from Google.
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