| Author | Marks, Robert, 1949- |
| Place | New York |
| Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
| Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
| Language | English |
| Type | Book |
| Series | Studies in environment and history |
| Shelf | Director's Office |
| Call Number | HC427.6.M37 2006 |
| Description | xix, 383 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm. |
| Note | Tigers, rice, silk, and silt : environment and economy in late imperial south China / Robert B. Marks. Firs and pines a hundred spans round: the natural environment of Lingnan -- All deeply forested and wild places are not malarious: human settlement and ecological change in Lingnan, 2-1400 CE -- Agriculture is the foundation: economic recovery and development of Lingnan during the Ming Dynasty, 1368-1644 -- All the people have fled: war and the environment in the mid-seventeenth-century crisis, 1644-83 -- Rich households compete to build ships: overseas trade and economic recovery -- It never used to snow: climatic change and agricultural productivity -- There is only a certain amount of grain produced: granaries and the role of the state in the food supply system -- Trade in rice is brisk: market integration and the environment -- Population increases daily, but the land does not: land clearance in the eighteenth century -- People said that extinction was not possible: the ecological consequences of land clearance. |
| ISBN | 0521027764 ; 9780521027762 |