Publication | Closed Access
Land-Use History (1730-1990) and Vegetation Dynamics in Central New England, USA
662
Citations
28
References
1992
Year
Historical GeographyEngineeringForest RestorationLand UseForestryLand-use HistoryLand DegradationEarth ScienceSocial SciencesForest ConservationLand-use PlanningLand Use PlanningLandscape ProcessesLand DevelopmentGeographyEnvironmental HistoryLandscape ChangeProspect Hill TractAgricultural HistoryLandscape EcologyDeforestationVegetation DynamicsNatural Resource ManagementCentral New EnglandForest Resource ManagementLand ManagementVegetation History
Forest clearance and agricultural expansion in central New England peaked in 1820‑80 with over 80 % of the land deforested, followed by progressive reforestation from 1850 onward. The study reconstructs land‑use and vegetation histories of a 380‑ha Harvard Forest tract to examine environmental controls on ownership, agriculture, logging, and vegetation responses. Minimal other metadata provided.
1. Histories of changing land use and vegetation of a 380-ha forested area in central Massachusetts (Prospect Hill tract of the Harvard Forest) were reconstructed to investigate (i) the environmental controls over land ownership patterns, agricultural practice and logging activity, and (ii) the vegetation response to these land-use factors. 2. Forest clearance and agricultural expansion parallel trends for central New England: increasing rates of deforestation through the late eighteenth century led to a peak in 1820-80 when more than 80% of the land was open. Reforestation on abandoned fields commenced in 1850 and increased progressively through the early twentieth century
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1