Deforesting the Earth

Regular price €49.99
Title
A01=Michael Williams
accessible
agriculture
Author_Michael Williams
Category=RNF
Category=RNPD
change
china
climates
deforestation
economy
environment
environmentalism
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
escalation
europe
farm
farming
fire
forest
fuel
general readership
geographical
geography
historical
history
humanity
impact
india
japan
latin american
new world
north america
shelter
society
transformation
transformed
trees
tropical
tropics

Product details

  • ISBN 9780226899473
  • Weight: 907g
  • Dimensions: 16 x 23mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Sep 2006
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Published in 2002, "Deforesting the Earth" was a landmark study of the history and geography of deforestation. Now available as an abridgement, this edition retains the breadth of the original while rendering its arguments accessible to a general readership. Deforestation - the thinning, changing, and wholesale clearing of forests for fuel, shelter, and agriculture - is among the most important ways humans have transformed the environment. Surveying ten thousand years to trace human-induced deforestation's effect on economies, societies, and landscapes around the world, "Deforesting the Earth" is the pre-eminent history of this process and its consequences. Beginning with the return of the forests after the ice age to Europe, North America, and the tropics, Michael Williams traces the impact of human-set fires for gathering and hunting, land clearing for agriculture, and other activities from the Paleolithic age through the classical world and the medieval period. He then focuses on forest clearing both within Europe and by European imperialists and industrialists abroad, from the 1500s to the early 1900s, in such places as the New World, India, and Latin America, and considers indigenous clearing in India, China, and Japan. Finally, he covers the current alarming escalation of deforestation, with our ever-increasing human population placing a potentially unsupportable burden on the world's forests.
Michael Williams is professor of geography and the environment at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Oriel College. He is the author, most recently, of Americans and Their Forests: A Historical Geography as well as the editor of Wetlands: A Threatened Landscape and coeditor of A Century of British Geography.