Development of environmental engineering
Ever
since people first recognized that their health and well-being were related to
the quality of their environment, they have applied thoughtful principles to
attempt to improve the quality of their environment. The ancient Harappan
civilization utilized early sewers in some cities. The Romans constructed
aqueducts to prevent drought and to create a clean, healthful water supply for
the metropolis of Rome. In the 15th century, Bavaria created laws restricting
the development and degradation of alpine country that constituted the region's
water supply.
The field emerged as a
separate environmental discipline during the middle third of the 20th century
in response to widespread public concern about water and pollution and
increasingly extensive environmental quality degradation. However, its roots
extend back to early efforts in public health engineering. Modern environmental
engineering began in London in the mid-19th century when Joseph Bazalgette
designed the first major sewerage system that reduced the incidence of
waterborne diseases such as cholera. The introduction of drinking water
treatment and sewage treatment in industrialized countries reduced waterborne
diseases from leading causes of death to rarities.
In many cases, as
societies grew, actions that were intended to achieve benefits for those
societies had longer-term impacts which reduced other environmental qualities.
One example is the widespread application of DDT to control agricultural pests
in the years following World War II. While the agricultural benefits were
outstanding and crop yields increased dramatically, thus reducing world hunger
substantially, and malaria was controlled better than it ever had been,
numerous species were brought to the verge of extinction due to the impact of
the DDT on their reproductive cycles. The story of DDT as vividly told in
Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring" is considered to be the birth of the
modern environmental movement and the development of the modern field of
"environmental engineering."
Conservation movements
and laws restricting public actions that would harm the environment have been
developed by various societies for millennia. Notable examples are the laws
decreeing the construction of sewers in London and Paris in the 19th century
and the creation of the U.S. national park system in the early 20th century.
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