Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Maps
- Preface
- Preface for the paperback edition
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Antecedents
- 3 The Tactics
- 4 The Strategies
- 5 The Drylands
- 6 The River
- 7 The Core
- 8 The Region
- 9 The Traders
- 10 The Troubles
- 11 The Opportunities
- 12 The Battle
- 13 Conclusion: Nature and Culture
- Abbreviations
- Sources Cited
- Archives
- Index
1 - Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Maps
- Preface
- Preface for the paperback edition
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Antecedents
- 3 The Tactics
- 4 The Strategies
- 5 The Drylands
- 6 The River
- 7 The Core
- 8 The Region
- 9 The Traders
- 10 The Troubles
- 11 The Opportunities
- 12 The Battle
- 13 Conclusion: Nature and Culture
- Abbreviations
- Sources Cited
- Archives
- Index
Summary
TO AN AIR TRAVELER, the equatorial African rain forest looks like a thick, green carpet that stretches to the horizon and beyond. This illusion is interrupted only by occasional roads, rivers, lakes, swamps, patches of intercalary savanna, and clearings for villages and fields. When viewed from the ground, however, the apparent monotony resolves itself into a spectrum of astonishing diversity. The rain forest is home to over 7000 species of flowering plants, and they intermingle promiscuously. More than a hundred species of trees have been identified in a single sample plot the size of three football fields. With so many species competing for space, the floral composition of the forest varies widely from place to place according to altitude, rainfall, slope, ground water, soils, and other factors. The resulting patches, each subtly different from the next, form a mosaic that covers an area roughly the size of continental western Europe.
Human populations inhabit all regions of the rain forest, but they are spread thinly over the land. The estimated population density is less than four inhabitants per square kilometer, and it was roughly the same a century ago. The forest dwellers have nevertheless left their mark on the environment they inhabit. As Paul W. Richards has observed:
In my opinion the “virgin tropical forest” of Africa is a myth. All we can find today are areas of old mature forest here and there which may have been undisturbed for some years but are certainly not unmodified relics of the original pre-human forest.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Games against NatureAn Eco-Cultural History of the Nunu of Equatorial Africa, pp. 1 - 10Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1988