Powerpoint
Powerpoint
Powerpoint
BY:
PITAMBAR DAS MAHESHWARI
PGT HISTORY
JNV ARVALLI, GUJARAT, PUNE
REGION.
WHAT WILL WE LEARN ?
1. Why Deforestation?
2. The Rise of Commercial Forestry .
3. How were the Lives of People Affected?
4. The Forest Act meant severe hardship for villagers across the
country.
5. Who could Hunt?
6.New Trades, New Employments and New Services.
7. Rebellion in the Forest
8. BASTAR AND JAVA( INDONESIA)
9. War and Deforestation.
10. New Developments in Forestry.
Why Deforestation?
• DEFORESTATION: Deforestation is cutting down of trees
indiscriminately in a forest area. Under the colonial rule it became
very systematic and extensive.
Why Deforestation?
• The disappearance of forests is referred to as deforestation.
• Deforestation is not a recent problem. The process began many
• centuries ago; but under colonial rule it became more systematic
and
Land to be Improved
• 1.the British directly
encouraged the production
of commercial crops like
jute, sugar, wheat and
cotton.
• 2.foodgrains were needed
to feed the growing
POPULATION
Sleepers on the Tracks
• 1.Sleepers – Wooden planks laid
across railway
• tracks; they hold the tracks in
position
• 2.The spread of railways from the
1850s created a new demand.
• 3. By the early nineteenth
century, oak forests in England
were
• disappearing. This created a
problem of timber supply for the
Royal
• Navy
Plantations
• Large areas of natural
forests were also
cleared to make way for
• tea, coffee and rubber
plantations to meet
Europe’s growing need
• for these commodities.
The Rise of Commercial Forestry
• Brandis set up the Indian
Forest Service in 1864
and helped formulate the
Indian Forest Act of
1865. The Imperial
Forest Research
Institute was set up at
Dehradun in 1906. The
system they taught here
was called ‘scientific
forestry’.
NATURAL FOREST LOST
• Many people now, including
ecologists, feel that this
system is not scientific at all.
In scientific forestry, natural
forests which had lots of
different types of trees were
cut down. Intheir place, one
type of tree was planted in
straight rows. This is called a
plantation.
FOREST SURVEY
• Forest officials surveyed the
forests, estimated the area
under different types of trees,
and made working plans for
forest management. They
planned how much of the
plantation area to cut every
year. The area cut was then to
be replanted so that it was
ready to be cut again in some
years
The Forest Act,1865
• After the Forest Act was
enacted in 1865, it was
amended twice, once in
1878 and then in 1927. The
1878 Act divided forests into
three categories: reserved,
protected and village
forests. The best forests
were called ‘reserved
forests’. Villagers could not
take anything from these
forests, even for their own
How were the Lives of People Affected?
A
• 1.Villagers wanted forests with a mixture of
species
• to satisfy different needs – fuel, fodder,
leaves.
• 2.The forest department on the other hand
wanted trees which were suitable for
building ships or railways.
B.
In forest areas, people use forest products