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An unremembered diversity: mixed husbandry and the American grasslands.
- Source :
-
Agricultural history [Agric Hist] 2009; Vol. 83 (3), pp. 352-83. - Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- The Green Revolution of the 1960s brought about a dramatic rise in global crop yields. But, as most observers acknowledge, this has come at a considerable cost to biodiversity. Plant breeding, synthetic fertilizers, and mechanization steadily narrowed the number of crop varieties commercially available to farmers and promoted fencerow-to-fencerow monocultures. Many historians trace the origins of this style of industrialized agriculture to the last great plow-up of the Great Plains in the 1920s. In the literature, farms in the plains are often described metaphorically as wheat factories, degrading successive landscapes. While in many ways these farms were a departure from earlier forms of husbandry in the American experience, monocultures were quite rare during the early transformation of the plains. Analysis of a large representative sample, based on manuscript agricultural censuses and involving twenty-five townships across the state of Kansas, demonstrates that diverse production reached even the most challenging of plains landscapes.
- Subjects :
- Animal Husbandry economics
Animal Husbandry education
Animal Husbandry history
Crops, Agricultural economics
Crops, Agricultural history
Environment
Geography economics
Geography education
Geography history
History, 20th Century
Kansas ethnology
Midwestern United States ethnology
Rural Health history
Biodiversity
Censuses history
Disasters economics
Disasters history
Droughts economics
Droughts history
Rural Population history
Social Change history
Socioeconomic Factors
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0002-1482
- Volume :
- 83
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Agricultural history
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 19839113
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3098/ah.2009.83.3.352