Pasts and Presents of Urban Socio-Hydrogeology: Groundwater Levels in Berlin, 1870–2020

Although it is self-evident that today’s groundwater issues have a history that frames both problems and responses, these histories have received scant attention in the socio-hydrogeological literature to date. This paper aims to enrich the field of socio-hydrogeology with a novel, historical perspe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Theresa Frommen, Timothy Moss
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/13/16/2261
id doaj-8f911db9d8c94edbb7857bbe87ebe7c2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8f911db9d8c94edbb7857bbe87ebe7c22021-08-26T14:27:50ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412021-08-01132261226110.3390/w13162261Pasts and Presents of Urban Socio-Hydrogeology: Groundwater Levels in Berlin, 1870–2020Theresa Frommen0Timothy Moss1Integrative Research Institute on Transformations of Human-Environment Systems (IRI THESys), Humboldt-Universitaet zu Berlin, 10099 Berlin, GermanyIntegrative Research Institute on Transformations of Human-Environment Systems (IRI THESys), Humboldt-Universitaet zu Berlin, 10099 Berlin, GermanyAlthough it is self-evident that today’s groundwater issues have a history that frames both problems and responses, these histories have received scant attention in the socio-hydrogeological literature to date. This paper aims to enrich the field of socio-hydrogeology with a novel, historical perspective on groundwater management whilst simultaneously demonstrating the value to water history of engaging with groundwater. This is achieved by applying hydrogeological, socio-hydrogeological, and historical methods in an interdisciplinary and collaborative research process while analysing a case study of urban groundwater management over a 150-year period. In the German capital Berlin, local aquifers have always been central to its water supply and, being close to the surface, have made for intricate interactions between urban development and groundwater levels. The paper describes oscillations in groundwater levels across Berlin’s turbulent history and the meanings attached to them. It demonstrates the value to socio-hydrogeology of viewing the history of groundwater through a socio-material lens and to urban history of paying greater attention to subsurface water resources. The invisibility and inscrutability associated with groundwater should not discourage attention, but rather incite curiosity into this underexplored realm of the subterranean city, inspiring scholars and practitioners well beyond the confines of hydrogeology.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/13/16/2261Berlingroundwater levelssocio-hydrogeologyurban history
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Theresa Frommen
Timothy Moss
spellingShingle Theresa Frommen
Timothy Moss
Pasts and Presents of Urban Socio-Hydrogeology: Groundwater Levels in Berlin, 1870–2020
Water
Berlin
groundwater levels
socio-hydrogeology
urban history
author_facet Theresa Frommen
Timothy Moss
author_sort Theresa Frommen
title Pasts and Presents of Urban Socio-Hydrogeology: Groundwater Levels in Berlin, 1870–2020
title_short Pasts and Presents of Urban Socio-Hydrogeology: Groundwater Levels in Berlin, 1870–2020
title_full Pasts and Presents of Urban Socio-Hydrogeology: Groundwater Levels in Berlin, 1870–2020
title_fullStr Pasts and Presents of Urban Socio-Hydrogeology: Groundwater Levels in Berlin, 1870–2020
title_full_unstemmed Pasts and Presents of Urban Socio-Hydrogeology: Groundwater Levels in Berlin, 1870–2020
title_sort pasts and presents of urban socio-hydrogeology: groundwater levels in berlin, 1870–2020
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Although it is self-evident that today’s groundwater issues have a history that frames both problems and responses, these histories have received scant attention in the socio-hydrogeological literature to date. This paper aims to enrich the field of socio-hydrogeology with a novel, historical perspective on groundwater management whilst simultaneously demonstrating the value to water history of engaging with groundwater. This is achieved by applying hydrogeological, socio-hydrogeological, and historical methods in an interdisciplinary and collaborative research process while analysing a case study of urban groundwater management over a 150-year period. In the German capital Berlin, local aquifers have always been central to its water supply and, being close to the surface, have made for intricate interactions between urban development and groundwater levels. The paper describes oscillations in groundwater levels across Berlin’s turbulent history and the meanings attached to them. It demonstrates the value to socio-hydrogeology of viewing the history of groundwater through a socio-material lens and to urban history of paying greater attention to subsurface water resources. The invisibility and inscrutability associated with groundwater should not discourage attention, but rather incite curiosity into this underexplored realm of the subterranean city, inspiring scholars and practitioners well beyond the confines of hydrogeology.
topic Berlin
groundwater levels
socio-hydrogeology
urban history
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/13/16/2261
work_keys_str_mv AT theresafrommen pastsandpresentsofurbansociohydrogeologygroundwaterlevelsinberlin18702020
AT timothymoss pastsandpresentsofurbansociohydrogeologygroundwaterlevelsinberlin18702020
_version_ 1721189382177685504