The Atlas of Early Modern Wildlife
English

About The Book

<p>What was the state of wildlife in Britain and Ireland before modern records began? <em>The Atlas of Early Modern Wildlife</em> looks at the era before climate change before the intensification of agriculture before even the Industrial Revolution. In the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries beavers still swim in the River Ness. Isolated populations of wolves and lynxes linger in the uplands. Sea eagles are widespread around the coasts. Wildcats and pine martens remain common in the Lake District.<br /> <br /> In this ground-breaking volume the observations of early modern amateur naturalists travellers and local historians are gathered together for the very first time. Drawing on more than 10000 records from across Britain and Ireland the book presents maps and notes on the former distribution of over 150 species providing a new baseline against which to discuss subsequent declines and extinctions expansions and introductions. A guide to identification describes the reliable and unreliable names of each species including the pre-Linnaean scientific nomenclature as well as local names in early modern English and where used in the sources Irish Scots Scottish Gaelic Welsh Cornish and Norn.<br /> <br /> Raising a good number of questions at the same time as it answers many others this remarkable resource will be of great value to conservationists archaeologists historians and anyone with an interest in the natural heritage of Britain and Ireland.</p>
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