Woodlands

Front Cover
HarperCollins UK, Aug 16, 2012 - Nature - 480 pages

‘Trees are wildlife just as deer or primroses are wildlife. Each species has its own agenda and its own interactions with human activities ...’

Written by one of Britain’s best-known naturalists, Woodlands offers a fascinating new insight into the trees of the British landscape that have filled us with awe and inspiration throughout the centuries.

Looking at such diverse evidence as the woods used in buildings and ships, and how woodland has been portrayed in pictures and photographs, Rackham traces British woodland through the ages, from the evolution of wildwood, through man’s effect on the landscape, modern forestry and its legacy, and recent conservation efforts and their effects.

In his lively and thoroughly engaging style, Rackham explores woodlands and their history, through names, surveys, mapping and legal documents, archaeology, photographs and works of art, thus offering an utterly compelling insight into British woodlands and how they have come to shape a national obsession.

 

Contents

Wild and Planted Trees
Lowland Zone
Highland Zone and Ireland
Caledonian Pinewoods
Damage Disease Defoliation
its Rise and Fall
its Legacy Plantations as Ecosystems
Blackmoor

Of WoodPasture and Savanna
Archives of Woodland and How to Study Them
Archaeology and LandForms of Woodland and WoodPasture
Pictures and Photographs
Evidence of Present Soils Trees and Vegetation
Reconstructing the Woods from Buildings Hurdles and Ships
AncientWoodland Plants and Other Creatures
Experiments and LongTerm Observations
The Recent Past and the Future
References
17
Bibliography
30
Tables
32
Plate Section About the Publisher
244
Copyright

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About the author (2012)

Oliver Rackham is a name synonymous with woodlands. He has written various books on trees and woodland, most recently a second edition of Ancient Woodland: Its History, Vegetation, and Uses in England. Dr Rackham (OBE) is currently Praelector Rhetoricus at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.