Bac k numbers of the Ecologist are available containing the following important articles:

Consequences of Development A Second Look at Volta Lake by Stanley Johnson. November 1971. Britain's Dying Chalk Streams by D. S. Martin. April 1971. The Swansong of the Clyde: plans for development at Hunterston, by Peter Bunyard and Charlie Maclean. May 1971. Has Oxford a Future? a city menaced by the car, by Helen Turner. July 1971. Rock-bottom: nearing the limits of metal-mining in Britain, by Friends of the Earth. May 1972.

Ecology and Economics The Economics of Hope: a leading economist questions the dogma of economic growth, by E. J . Mishan. January 1971. Population and Inflation: demographic growth the cause of inflation, by W. M. S. Russell. February 1971. Common Market v. Environment: environmental reasons for staying out, by Brian Johnson. May 1971. Economics and Entropy: economics is also bound by scientific laws, by Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen. July 1972. The Stationary State Economy by Herman Daly. July 1972. How to Stabilise the Economy by Herman Daly. March 1973. Is Ecology Elitist? by David Pearce. February 1973. Propaganda for What ? economists refuse to come to terms with the muddleheadedness of their assumptions, by John Adams. May 1973. Towards a Policy of Zero Energy Growth by Kenneth A. Dahlberg. September 1973.

Energy Is there a Peaceful Atom? the ravages of radiation, by Peter Bunyard. July 1970. The Power Crisis: galloping energy consumption, by Peter Bunyard. October 1970. Nuclear Power and its Dangers by Walter Patterson. July 1973. Canada and the US Energy Crisis: the US is looking to Canada to provide fuel, by Geoff Mains. May 1973 In Search of Bonanza: can Britain supply a significant proportion of its energy requirement? by Peter Bunyard. May 1973. Energy Crisis or Crunch? oil shortage will cripple the West, by Peter Bunyard. December 1973.

The Ecology of Health Medicine and Agriculture: is there a merger needed ? by R. Lindsay Robb. July 1970. The Diseases of Civilisation: the declining health of urban man, by Robert Walker. August 1970. Affluence and the Elderly by W. Ferguson Anderson. April 1972. Development and Disease in Africa by Charles C. Hughes and John M. Hunter. (1) September 1972. (2) October 1972. The Medicine of Industrial Man by John Powles. October 1972. Should We Forbid Smoking? by Allan Chatelier and Robert Waller. December 1972. Evolution and Health: man evolved into a natural environment within which he was healthy. Then he altered his environment, by Stephen Boyden. August 1973. The Delaney Amendment: a defence of the US law that prohibits the use of food additives suspected of being carcinogenic, by Samuel S. Epstein. November 1973. The Ecology of Agriculture The Farm Drugs Scandal: antibiotics and factory farming, by Joanne Bower. August 1970. Where Have All the Hedges Gone? the prairie obsession, by Michael Allaby. October 1970. Man-made Plagues: return to natural controls in Malaysia, by Gordon R. Conway. October 1970. The Green Revolution: genetic backlash. A discussion by four experts. October 1970. Spanner in the Soil: destruction of Britain's farmland fertility, by L. B. Powell. December 1970. The Pesticide Fallacy: a critique of the principles of pest controls, by Roy Bridger. February 1971. How Boophilus Tricked the Tickcides: the victorious tick, by Michael Allaby. May 1971. Factory Farming: a passing aberration, by Ruth Harrison. October 1971. Who Cares about DDT? by Goran Lofroth. November 1971. We Need these Soil Tillers by Cleeland Bean. February 1972. Integrated Pest Control and the Human Environment by Walter Ryder. March 1972. Miracle Rice and Miracle Locusts: the genetic vulnerability of the world's major farm crops, by Michael Allaby. May 1973.

Low Impact Technology The Sailing Ship in a Fuel Crisis by Basil Greenhill. September 1972. Low Energy Housing by Andrew MacKillop. December 1972. Living Off the Sun by Andrew MacKillop. July 1973. Unravel the Grid! The national electricity grid is inefficient; energy could be saved and environmental impact reduced, were we to adopt alternatives, by Andrew MacKillop. November 1973.