An Environmental History of Wildlife in England 1650-1950

(Elle) #1

(^200) noTes
7 Rackham, History of the Countryside, pp. 119–52.
8 O. Rackham, Trees and Woodland in the British Landscape (London: Dent,
1976), p. 121.
9 P. Dallas, ‘Sustainable environments: common wood pastures in Norfolk’,
Landscape History 31 (2010), 23–36.
10 Hertfordshire Archives and Local Studies 10996 A/B.
11 Rackham, History of the Countryside, pp. 65–8.
12 O. Rackham, Woodlands (London: Collins, 2006), pp. 348–73.
13 P. H. Colebourne, ‘Discovering ancient woods’, British Wildlife 1 (1989), 61–75.
14 Colebourne, ‘Discovering ancient woods’, p. 70.
15 Ibid., p. 74.
16 M. Warren, ‘European butterflies on the brink’, British Wildlife 1 (1989), 185–96.
17 S. P. Carter, ‘Habitat change and bird populations’, British Wildlife 1 (1990),
324–34.
18 Ibid., p. 328.
19 P. Dolman, S. Hinsley, P. Bellamy and K. Watts, ‘Woodland birds in patchy
landscapes. The evidence base for strategic networks’, Ibis 149 (2007), 146–60.
20 Colebourne, ‘Ancient woodland’, p. 70.
21 J. White, ‘What is a veteran tree and where are they all?’, Quarterly Journal of
Forestry 91, 3 (1997), 222–6. J. White, ‘Estimating the age of large and veteran
trees in Britain’, Forestry Commission Information Note 250 (Alice Holt:
Forestry Commission, 1999).
22 P. A. Briggs, ‘Bats in trees’, Arboricultural Journal 22 (1998), 25–35. K. J. Kirby
and C. M. Drake (eds), Dead Wood Matters (Peterborough: English Nature,
1993). A. Orange, Lichens on Trees (Cardiff: National Museum of Wales,
1994). H. J. Read and M. Frater, Woodland Habitats (London: Routledge,
1999). H. J. Read, Veteran Trees: a guide to good management (Peterborough:
English Nature, 2000).
23 K. Alexander, ‘The invertebrates of Britain’s wood pastures’, British Wildlife
11(1999), 108–17.
24 D. A. Ratcliffe, ‘Post-medieval and recent change in British vegetation: the
culmination of human influence’, New Phytologist 98 (1984), 73–100.
25 J. Parry, Heathland (London: National Trust, 2003); N. Webb, Heathlands
(London: Collins, 1986).
26 Rackham, History of the Countryside, pp. 299–303; T. Williamson, Sutton
Hoo and its Landscape; the context of monuments (Oxford: Windgather,
2008), pp. 81–5.
27 E. Kerridge, The Agricultural Revolution (London: Allen and Unwin, 1967),
pp. 43–51.
28 M. Bailey, ‘The rabbit and the medieval East Anglian economy’, Agricultural
History Review 36 (1988), 1–20. J. Sheail, Rabbits and their History (Newton
Abbot: David and Charles, 1971), pp. 35–73. T. Williamson, Rabbits, Warrens
and Archaeology (Stroud: Tempus, 2007), pp. 97–109.

Free download pdf