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Britain's landscape, the product both of natural geological
processes and some 10,000 years of human habitation, has a uniquely
rich historical diversity. In "The Landscape of Britain," Michael
Reed explains the forces at work in the evolution of the landscape,
pointing out examples of surviving evidence from the past.
The landscape of late twentieth-century Britain is the end product
of human effort directed not only towards satisfying basic physical
needs for food and shelter, but also towards expressing profound
spiritual and intellectual aspirations, whether by means of burial
mounds or churches, schools or monasteries. This volume examines
the endless processes of accretion which have created the urban and
rural landscapes as today's inhabitants have inherited them,
showing how each generation makes its own individual contribution
without being able entirely to erase those of its predecessors,
however remote or distant in time.
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Decision
Barbara Hofland
Paperback
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Discovery Miles 5 360
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