2013
DOI: 10.1007/s12685-013-0075-1
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Feeding and cleaning the city: the role of the urban waterscape in provision and disposal in Vienna during the industrial transformation

Abstract: This article presents an integrated socio-ecological perspective on the changing interrelations between Vienna's ''urban metabolism'' and the river Danube during the industrial transformation in the nineteenth century. During this period of rapid urban population growth and industrial development, the amount of materials and energy used in the city as well as the corresponding outflows of wastes and emissions, that is, the size of urban metabolism, multiplied. These changes in urban metabolism had a profound e… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…We can thus assume that human excreta were also applied on intensively used land (orchards, vineyards and to a lesser extent, cropland) to substitute for manure of animal origin. In the 19th century, efficient management and application of human excreta was heavily debated among agronomists of the time [84]. Our reconstructions suggest that the application of human excreta may have considerably contributed to soil fertility of rustic lands-even though we do not find any explicit confirmation of this practice in the historical sources.…”
Section: Lord and Peasant Resource Use And Implications For Sustainabcontrasting
confidence: 61%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…We can thus assume that human excreta were also applied on intensively used land (orchards, vineyards and to a lesser extent, cropland) to substitute for manure of animal origin. In the 19th century, efficient management and application of human excreta was heavily debated among agronomists of the time [84]. Our reconstructions suggest that the application of human excreta may have considerably contributed to soil fertility of rustic lands-even though we do not find any explicit confirmation of this practice in the historical sources.…”
Section: Lord and Peasant Resource Use And Implications For Sustainabcontrasting
confidence: 61%
“…We modelled N content of human faeces and urine according to [82,83] and cross-checked our findings with rough estimates of N contained in the specific food intake. Here, we assumed large losses due to storage and transportation according to [84], arriving at similar values of net N availability in human excreta as [85,86]. Table 2 shows total biomass extraction, biomass transferred and final availability of biomass for the two Breuner demesnes Gut Grafenegg and Gut Neuaigen and for the two administrative districts Augegend and Waldgegend within one agricultural year.…”
Section: Historical Sources and Their Socio-metabolic Readingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Urban geomorphology analyses: (i) the impact of urban sprawling and human activities on natural geomorphology (Gierlinger et al 2013, Mohapatra et al 2014, Mozzi et al 2016 (ii) the geomorphic constraints on urban development (Cooke 1976);…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Haidvogl, Guthyne-Horvath, . 15 Haidvogl, Guthyne-Horvath, Gierlinger, Hohensinner and Sonnlechner, 2013. Gierlinger, Gingrich, Haidvogl and Krausmann, 2013.…”
Section: Hydro-morphological Characteristics Of Vienna's Waterscapementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This implies a major statistical break when the tax boundary was expanded in 17 Krausmann, 2013. Gingrich, Haidvogl and Krausmann, 2012. Gierlinger, Gingrich, Haidvogl and Krausmann, 2013.…”
Section: Reconstructing Vienna's Urban Metabolismmentioning
confidence: 99%