Journal article written by 2012 DPDF Ecological History Fellow Caterina Scaramelli:

This paper takes water quality as an ethnographic subject. It looks at how water quality monitors in Boston make sense of the quality of water through mundane engagement with three non-human beings who they encounter during their monitoring activities: herring, bacteria and water lily. Each of these organisms suggests a different understanding of water quality for the monitors and poses a dilemma. Water quality monitors who contribute to the production of water quality data come to know water quality as through direct interactions with these beings, mediated by both sensorial experience and laboratory data. These experiences, at the same time, confuse and redraw relationships between science, water flows, non-human vitality, including that of invasive species, and people.

Publication Details

Title
Making Sense of Water Quality: Multispecies Encounters on the Mystic River
Authors
Scaramelli, Caterina
Publisher
Brill Academic Pub
Publish Date
September 2013
Citation
Scaramelli, Caterina, Making Sense of Water Quality: Multispecies Encounters on the Mystic River (Brill Academic Pub, September 2013).
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