The underdraining of farmland in England during the nineteenth century
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The underdraining of farmland in England during the nineteenth century
(Cambridge studies in historical geography, 15)
Cambridge University Press, 1989
- : pbk
Available at / 30 libraries
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University Library for Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo図
233.3:P555018965615
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Note
Bibliography: p. 287-307
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Underdraining has been recognized as one of the major capital-intensive agricultural improvements of the nineteenth century. Over half the agricultural area of England is subject to waterlogging and is in need of some form of underdraining, rendering the improvement both technically and economically basic to much of English agriculture. By removing excess soil water, the object of underdraining was to reproduce as far as possible the conditions of free-draining land, which was workable all year round, and to create an optimum soil-moisture content for both plant growth and cultivation. Despite the necessity for the improvement, a wide-ranging debate exists in the literature on the extent, effectiveness and agricultural importance of underdraining in the nineteenth century. The present study attempts to resolve this debate. By examining the evidence of draining loans under the Public Money Draining Acts and of the various land improvement companies and the accounts of estates in Devon, Northamptonshire and Northumberland, a precise record has been provided for the, first of the spread of underdraining in England in the nineteenth century, of the factors involved in its adoption and of its impact on agricultural practice in that period.
Table of Contents
- 1. Debates about underdraining
- 2. The need for underdraining in the nineteenth century
- 3. The intensity and location of underdraining, 1845-1899
- 4. The temporal pattern of underdraining in the nineteenth century
- 5. Capital provision and the management of the improvement
- 6. The success of underdraining as an agricultural improvement
- 7. Findings about underdraining.
by "Nielsen BookData"