The colony that became Ontario arose almost spontaneously out of the
confusion and uncertainty following the American Revolution, as a
quickly chosen refuge for some 10,000 Loyalists who had to leave their
former homes. After the War of 1812 settlers began to spread
throughout the inter-lake peninsula that was to become southern
Ontario and by the middle of the nineteenth century expansion had led
to a diversifying agriculture and an increasingly open farming
landscape that replaced a mature forest ecosystem. The scale of the
change from forest to cropland profoundly affected what had been for
many decades a rich environment for life forms, from large herbivores
down to microscopic creatures. In Making Ontario David Wood shows that
the most effective agent of change in the first century of Ontario's
development was not the locomotive but settlers' attempts to change
the forest into agricultural land. Wood traces the various threads
that went into creating a successful farming colony while documenting
the sacrifice of the forest ecosystem to the demands of progress,
progress that prepared the ground for the railway. Making Ontario
provides a detailed focus on environmental modification at a time of
great changes. It is liberally illustrated with analytical maps based
on archival research.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780773568044
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Vendor
McGill-Queen's University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter