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A million wild acres : 200 years of man and an Australian forest

A million wild acres : 200 years of man and an Australian forest

"When first published in 1981, A million wild acres was seen as a contentious story of men and land; of occupation and growth. By following the men who crossed the Blue Mountains into northern New South Wales, Eric Rolls rewrote the history of settlement and destroyed the argument that Australia's present dense eucalpyt forests are the remnants of 200 years of clearing. The Pilliga teems with wildlife, with plants and trees, with feral pigs, prolific, intelligent and secretive; with the marvellous interaction of insects and plants, rare animals and birds. The lovely tangle which is the modern forest came to life as Rolls - poet, famer, hunter and conservationist - reflected on soils, living conditions, breeding and ecology. Rolls' brilliant writing records the history of changes to the forests, especially to tree density, caused by Aboriginal burning, then by its cessation, and by the arrival of immigrant settlers and animals. His conclusions and their later misrepresentation for political purposes by both farmers and scientists are addressed in this edition by Tom Griffiths' seminal essay, 'The writing of A million wild acres'.--Cover gate fold.

Item Information
Barcode Shelf Location Collection Volume Ref. Status Due Date
920333064 NW 634.90994 ROL
Non Fiction   . Available .  
. Catalogue Record 34367 ItemInfo Beginning of record . Catalogue Record 34367 ItemInfo Top of page .
Catalogue Information
Field name Details
RSN 34367
ISBN 9780868064642 (pbk.)
9780868067148 (hbk. : limited ed.)
Call Number 634.9099444
Dates Rolls, Eric C. 1923-2007.
Edition 30th anniversary ed.
Name of Publisher McMahons Point, N.S.W. : Hale & Iremonger, 2011.
Attachments maps ; 24-25 cm.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (p. 426-449) and index.
Summary "When first published in 1981, A million wild acres was seen as a contentious story of men and land; of occupation and growth. By following the men who crossed the Blue Mountains into northern New South Wales, Eric Rolls rewrote the history of settlement and destroyed the argument that Australia's present dense eucalpyt forests are the remnants of 200 years of clearing. The Pilliga teems with wildlife, with plants and trees, with feral pigs, prolific, intelligent and secretive; with the marvellous interaction of insects and plants, rare animals and birds. The lovely tangle which is the modern forest came to life as Rolls - poet, famer, hunter and conservationist - reflected on soils, living conditions, breeding and ecology. Rolls' brilliant writing records the history of changes to the forests, especially to tree density, caused by Aboriginal burning, then by its cessation, and by the arrival of immigrant settlers and animals. His conclusions and their later misrepresentation for political purposes by both farmers and scientists are addressed in this edition by Tom Griffiths' seminal essay, 'The writing of A million wild acres'.--Cover gate fold.
Subject Forests and forestr New South Wale Pilliga Regio History.
Frontier and pioneer lif History.
Natural history
Pilliga Region (N.S.W. History.
Australi History.
Added entry The writing of a million wild acres
Catalogue Information 34367 Beginning of record . Catalogue Information 34367 Top of page .