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      The Lost Fens: England’s Greatest Ecological Disaster

      4 in stock

      Firm sale: non returnable item
      SKU 9780752486994 Categories ,
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      However, pause a while off main roads and consider place names and road names: Fenny Lane, The Withies, Commonside, Reed Holme, Fen Common, Turbary Lane, Wildmore, Adventurers’ Fen, Wicken Fen, and more;

      The loss of the great fenlands of eastern England is the great...

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      Description

      Product ID:9780752486994
      Product Form:Paperback / softback
      Country of Manufacture:GB
      Title:The Lost Fens
      Subtitle:England's Greatest Ecological Disaster
      Authors:Author: Ian D. Rotherham
      Subjects:Social impact of disasters / accidents (natural or man-made), Social impact of disasters, Wetlands, swamps, fens, The environment, Pollution and threats to the environment, Climate change, Natural disasters, Sustainability, Nature and the natural world: general interest, Local history, Wetlands, swamps, fens, The environment, Pollution & threats to the environment, Climate change, Natural disasters, Sustainability, Natural history, Local history, Cambridgeshire, Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Suffolk
      Description:Select Guide Rating
      However, pause a while off main roads and consider place names and road names: Fenny Lane, The Withies, Commonside, Reed Holme, Fen Common, Turbary Lane, Wildmore, Adventurers’ Fen, Wicken Fen, and more;

      The loss of the great fenlands of eastern England is the greatest single removal of ecology in our history. So thorough was the process that most visitors to the regions, or even people living there, have little idea of what has gone. For many, the Fenlands are the vast expansive flatlands of intensive farming, the ‘breadbaskets’ of Britain. Lost are the vast flocks of wetland birds that filled the evening skies in winter, the frozen wetlands and the fen skaters of the winter, and the abundant black terns or breeding wading birds of the summer months. However, pause a while off main roads and consider place names and road names: Fenny Lane, The Withies, Commonside, Reed Holme, Fen Common, Turbary Lane, Wildmore, Adventurers’ Fen, Wicken Fen, and more; they tell a story of a landscape now gone but once hugely important. The Fens bred revolution and civil war and paid the penalty. They nurtured religious non-conformism with global impact. After 1066, the Saxons withheld the Normans’ onslaught, and in the 1970s, unting’s Beavers took action against twentieth-century invaders. The fenscapes, neither water nor land but something in-between, breed independence and, if necessary, dissention. This story is of politically and economically driven ecological catastrophe and loss. So much has gone, but we do not even know fully what was there before. With global environmental change, and especially climate change, fenlands once again have major roles in our sustainable futures.


      Imprint Name:The History Press Ltd
      Publisher Name:The History Press Ltd
      Country of Publication:GB
      Publishing Date:2013-04-01

      Additional information

      Weight538 g
      Dimensions244 × 170 × 14 mm