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Environmental History Resources

This guide provides an overview of environmental history resources held in the University of Arkansas Special Collections.

Photo: newspaper clippings

                                  Overall Economic Development Program for Buffalo River Basin (BRIA), 1962

Overall Economic Development Program for Buffalo River Basin (BRIA), 1962. Ozark Society Records, 1957-1975 (MS Oz1 219, 219A-I, Ozark, Series 10, Box 1, File 831).

About this guide

The manuscript collections held in Special Collections constitute a substantial record of the environmental history of Arkansas and the region. The collections address environmental policy at the state and federal level; the development of local and state-wide activist organizations; and the creation of parks and other preserves by state and federal governments. The decades-long effort to preserve the Buffalo River is particularly well-documented, including the papers of Dr. Neil Compton, the Ozark Society, and other individuals associated with organizing to prevent the damming of Arkansas’s wild rivers, and ultimately, to ensure the protection of the Buffalo as a part of the National Park Service.

Special Collections also holds the records of Arkansas branches of national and international environmental advocacy groups such as the Audubon Society. Several collections pertain to Arkansas garden and horticultural clubs, and the department also holds the records of the UA Agricultural Cooperative Extension Services and numerous other affiliated entities, as well as collections related to natural resources, industry, and economic development.

Additionally, the University Libraries hold numerous electronic and print resources for the study of ecology, environmental sciences, public policy and resource management and the other areas of study Earth Day helps inspire.

Digital Projects related to Environmental History