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Slash-and-burn

Slash-and-burn agriculture is a farming method that involves the cutting and burning of plants in a forest or woodland to create a field called a swidden. The method begins by cutting down the trees and woody plants in an area. The downed vegetation, or "slash", is then left to dry, usually right before the rainiest part of the year. Then, the biomass is burned, resulting in a nutrient-rich layer of ash which makes the soil fertile, as well as temporarily eliminating weed and pest species. After about three to five years, the plot's productivity decreases due to depletion of nutrients along with weed and pest invasion, causing the farmers to abandon the field and move to a new area. The time it takes for a swidden to recover depends on the location and can be as little as five years to more than twenty years, after which the plot can be slashed and burned again, repeating the cycle.[1][2] In Bangladesh and India, the practice is known as jhum or jhoom.[3][4][5]

Painting by Eero Järnefelt of forest-burning

Slash-and-burn is a type of shifting cultivation, an agricultural system in which farmers routinely move from one cultivable area to another. A rough estimate is that 200 million to 500 million people worldwide use slash-and-burn.[6][better source needed] Slash-and-burn causes temporary deforestation. Ashes from the burnt trees help farmers by providing nutrients for the soil.[7] In low density of human population this approach is very sustainable but the technique is not scalable for large human populations.[8]

A similar term is assarting, which is the clearing of forests, usually (but not always) for the purpose of agriculture. Assarting does not include burning.[9]

History

Historically, slash-and-burn cultivation has been practiced throughout much of the world. Fire was already used by hunter-gatherers before the invention of agriculture, and still is in present times. Clearings created by the fire were made for many reasons, such as to provide new growth for game animals and to promote certain kinds of edible plants.

During the Neolithic Revolution, groups of hunter-gatherers domesticated various plants and animals, permitting them to settle down and practice agriculture, which provided more nutrition per hectare than hunting and gathering. Some groups could easily plant their crops in open fields along river valleys, but others had forests covering their land. Thus, since Neolithic times, slash-and-burn agriculture has been widely used to clear land to make it suitable for crops and livestock.[10]

Large groups wandering in the woodlands was once a common form of society in European prehistory. The extended family burned and cultivated their swidden plots, sowed one or more crops, and then proceeded on to the next plot.[11]

Technique

 
Slash-and-burn agriculture in Maaninka, Finland, in the 1920s

Slash-and-burn fields are typically used and owned by a family until the soil is exhausted. At this point the ownership rights are abandoned, the family clears a new field, and trees and shrubs are permitted to grow on the former field. After a few decades, another family or clan may then use the land and claim usufructuary rights. In such a system there is typically no market in farmland, so land is not bought or sold on the open market and land rights are traditional.[citation needed]

In slash-and-burn agriculture, forests are typically cut months before a dry season. The "slash" is permitted to dry and then burned in the following dry season. The resulting ash fertilizes the soil[12][13] and the burned field is then planted at the beginning of the next rainy season with crops such as rice, maize, cassava, or other staples. This work was once done using simple tools such as machetes, axes, hoes and shovels.

Benefits and drawbacks

This system of agriculture provides millions of people with food and income. It has been ecologically sustainable for thousands of years. Because the leached soil in many tropical regions, such as the Amazon, are nutritionally extremely poor, slash-and-burn is one of the only types of agriculture which can be practiced in these areas. Slash-and-burn farmers typically plant a variety of crops, instead of a monoculture, and contribute to a higher biodiversity due to creating mosaic habitats. The general ecosystem is not harmed in traditional slash-and-burn, aside from a small temporary patch.[citation needed]

This technique is most unsuitable for the production of cash crops. A huge amount of land, or a low density of people, is required for slash-and-burn. When slash-and-burn is practiced in the same area too often, because the human population density has increased to an unsustainable level, the forest will eventually be destroyed.

Regionally

South Asia

 
Deforestation in Indonesia to obtain palm oil. Much of the country's forests are being destroyed at a very rapid rate to be replaced by palm trees.

Tribal groups in the northeastern Indian states of Tripura, Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Mizoram and Nagaland and the Bangladeshi districts of Rangamati, Khagrachari, Bandarban and Sylhet refer to slash-and-burn agriculture as jhum or jhoom cultivation. The system involves clearing land, by fire or clear-felling, for economically important crops such as upland rice, vegetables or fruits. After a few cycles, the land's fertility declines and a new area is chosen. Jhum cultivation is most often practiced on the slopes of thickly-forested hills. Cultivators cut the treetops to allow sunlight to reach the land, burning the trees and grasses for fresh soil. Although it is believed that this helps fertilize the land, it can leave it vulnerable to erosion. Holes are made for the seeds of crops[14] such as sticky rice, maize, eggplant and cucumber. After considering jhum's effects, the government of Mizoram has introduced a policy to end the method in the state.[15]

Americas

Some American civilizations, like the Maya, have used slash-and-burn cultivation since ancient times. Native Americans in the United States also used fire in agriculture and hunting.[16] In the Amazon, many peoples such as the Yanomami also live off the slash and burn method due to the Amazon's poor soil quality.[17]

Northern Europe

 
a recently burned area at the Telkkämäki Heritage Farm in Finland, demonstrating the technique.

Slash-and-burn techniques were used in northeastern Sweden in agricultural systems. In Sweden the practice is known as svedjebruk.[18]

 
Slash-and-burn in Småland, Sweden (1904)

Telkkämäki Nature Reserve in Kaavi, Finland, is an open-air museum where slash-and-burn agriculture is demonstrated. Farm visitors can see how people farmed when slash-and-burn was the norm in the Northern Savonian region of eastern Finland beginning in the 15th century. Areas of the reserve are burnt each year.[19]

Svedjebruk

Svedjebruk is a Swedish and Norwegian term for slash-and-burn agriculture derived from the Old Norse word sviða, which means "to burn". This practice originated in Russia in the region of Novgorod and was widespread in Finland and Eastern Sweden during the Medieval period. It spread to western Sweden in the 16th century when Finnish settlers were encouraged to migrate there by King Gustav Vasa to help clear the dense forests. Later, when the Finns were persecuted by the local Swedes, svedjebruk farming was spread by refugees to eastern Norway, more specifically in the eastern part of Solør, in the area bordering Sweden known as Finnskogen ("the Finnish woods").

The practice also spread to New Sweden in North America. Reinforced by the use of fire in agriculture and hunting by Native Americans, it became an important part of pioneering in America.[20]

 
Lemurs in dry deciduous forests of Madagascar are threatened by deforestation for the creation of farmland and pasture.

Description of process

Svedjebruk involved stripping a ring of bark completely around the trunk of coniferous trees like pine or spruce or felling them, allowing them to dry, setting fire to the dried forest and growing crops on the fertile ash-covered soil. The resulting ash was highly fertile, but only for a short period. The clearing was initially planted to rye as soon as the ash had fully settled and sufficiently cooled. When the rain came, it packed the ash around the rye. The rye germinated and grew prolifically, with anywhere from 25 to 100 stalks (or straws), each with multiple grains.

Only two tools were required, the axe and the sickle. The axe cut the trees to start the cycle. When the rye had ripened, it was harvested with a sickle, which could reach among the rocks and stumps where a scythe would have been ineffective.[21]

In the second and third year the field would be sown with turnips or cabbages. It then might be grazed for several years before being allowed to return to woodland.

Svedjebruk culture

Svedjebruk required felling new forest and burning a new area every year. It was necessary to allow the former fields to regrow with forest for 10–30 years before repeating the cycle. As a result, the dwellings were often many kilometers from the fields. Furthermore, since the process was man-power intensive, extended families tended to work together and live in compact communities.

The svedjebruk farming approach required a large area. When forest was plentiful, the Finns were very prosperous. As population grew and restrictions were placed on the forest which could be burned, it became increasingly difficult. By 1710, during the conflict with Sweden, because of their suspect loyalties Norwegian authorities considered expelling them from the border area, but did not do so because it was judged they were too poor to survive if evicted.

Research

This type of agriculture is discouraged by many developmental or environmentalist organisations, with the main alternatives being promoted are switching to more intensive, permanent farming methods, or promoting a shift from farming to working in different, higher-paying industries altogether. Other organisations promote helping farmers achieve higher productivity by introducing new techniques.

Not allowing the slashed vegetation to burn completely and ploughing the resultant charcoal into the soil (slash-and-char) has been proposed as way to boost yields.[22]

Promoters of a project from the early 2000s claimed that slash-and-burn cultivation could be reduced if farmers grew black pepper crops between Inga trees, which they termed 'Inga alley cropping'.[23]

A method of improving the yields in a type of traditional assarting cultivation used to grow common beans in Central American called 'slash-and-cover', has been proposed, by additionally planting leguminous shrubs to act as a fallow crop after the soil is exhausted and one is ready to clear a new patch of forest.[24]

Gallery

See also

General literature

  • Conklin, H. C. (February 1961). "The Study of Shifting Cultivation" (PDF). Current Anthropology. 2 (1): 27–61. doi:10.1086/200160. JSTOR 2739597. S2CID 132297474.
  • Nesholen, Birger (1994). "Svedjebrukerne", Østlandske Skogsområder, Den Norske Turistforening.
  • Pyne, Stephen J. (1997). Vestal Fire: An Environmental History, Told Through Fire, of Europe and Europe's Encounter with the World. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press. ISBN 0-295-97596-2.
  • Sawyer, Birgit; Sawyer, Peter H. (1993). Medieval Scandinavia: from Conversion to Reformation, Circa 800–1500. University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0-8166-1739-2.
  • Stagg, Frank Noel (1956). East Norway and Its Frontier. Allen & Unwin.

Citations

  1. ^ "Slash-and-burn agriculture". Encyclopaedia Britannica.
  2. ^ EcoLogic Development Fund. "Slash and Burn Agriculture". ecologic.org.
  3. ^ Md Shahidul Islam (2012). "Jhum". In Sirajul Islam and Ahmed A. Jamal (ed.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  4. ^ Choudhury, Sanjoy (March–April 2010). "Jhum". Geography and You. Vol. 10, no. 59. Archived from the original on 4 March 2019.
  5. ^ Disha Experts (2018). 1500+ MCQs with Explanatory Notes For Geography, Ecology & Environment. Disha Publications. p. 130.
  6. ^ Skegg, Martin (24 September 2011). "TV highlights 27/09/2011". The Guardian. from the original on 10 March 2017.
  7. ^ "Slash and Burn Agriculture – An Overview of Slash and Burn". Geography.about.com. Retrieved 2013-06-22.
  8. ^ Kukla, Jaroslav; Whitfeld, Timothy; Cajthaml, Tomáš; Baldrian, Petr; Veselá-Šimáčková, Hana; Novotný, Vojtěch; Frouz, Jan (2019). "The effect of traditional slash-and-burn agriculture on soil organic matter, nutrient content, and microbiota in tropical ecosystems of Papua New Guinea". Land Degradation & Development. 30 (2): 166–177. doi:10.1002/ldr.3203. ISSN 1099-145X. S2CID 133993874.
  9. ^ "Assarting", The Free Dictionary, retrieved 2020-10-12
  10. ^ Jaime Awe, Maya Cities and Sacred Caves, Cu bola Books (2006)
  11. ^ Clark J.G.D., 1952, Farming: Clearance and Cultivation II Prehistoric Europe: The Economic Basis, pg.s 91–107, Cambridge.
  12. ^ "Best Management Practices for Wood Ash as Agricultural Soil Amendment" (PDF). athenaeum.libs.uga.edu.
  13. ^ "Slash and Burn Agriculture | EcoLogic Development Fund". www.ecologic.org. Retrieved 2018-01-10.
  14. ^ "Jhum". banglapedia.org.
  15. ^ TI Trade (2011-01-17). "The Assam Tribune Online". Assamtribune.com. Retrieved 2013-06-22.
  16. ^ Pyne, 1997:470
  17. ^ Owl, M. Y. (1976). "Yanomamo ecology, population control, and their relationship to slash and burn agriculture". California Anthropologist. 6 (2): 6–20. ISSN 0272-5452. PMID 12334855.
  18. ^ "Sviðna, Svedjebruk and Slash & Burn cultivation | Northern Bush". Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  19. ^ . Outdoors.fi. 2013-05-14. Archived from the original on 2013-07-17. Retrieved 2013-06-22.
  20. ^ Pyne, 1997:470
  21. ^ Video on the procedure. In: Youtube.com
  22. ^ Biederman, L. A. (31 December 2012). "Biochar and its effects on plant productivity and nutrient cycling: a meta-analysis". GCB Bioenergy. 5 (2): 202–214. doi:10.1111/gcbb.12037. S2CID 86216355.
  23. ^ Elkan, Daniel (21 April 2004). "Fired with ambition". The Guardian. from the original on 4 March 2019.
  24. ^ Kettler, . S. (1996-08-01). "Fallow enrichment of a traditional slash/mulch system in southern Costa Rica: comparisons of biomass production and crop yield". Agroforestry Systems. 35 (2): 165–176. doi:10.1007/BF00122777. ISSN 0167-4366. S2CID 40357446.

External links

  • Karki, Sameer (2002). Community Involvement in and Management of Forest Fires in South East Asia (PDF) (Technical report). Project FireFight South East Asia. (PDF) from the original on 22 October 2018.
  • Video of slash-and-burn at the Telkkämäki Nature Reserve, Finland, in 2012
  • Video of slash-and-burn in Sweden around 1930–32 (from the YouTube channel of the Nordic Museum)

slash, burn, confused, with, scorched, earth, agriculture, farming, method, that, involves, cutting, burning, plants, forest, woodland, create, field, called, swidden, method, begins, cutting, down, trees, woody, plants, area, downed, vegetation, slash, then, . Not to be confused with Scorched earth Slash and burn agriculture is a farming method that involves the cutting and burning of plants in a forest or woodland to create a field called a swidden The method begins by cutting down the trees and woody plants in an area The downed vegetation or slash is then left to dry usually right before the rainiest part of the year Then the biomass is burned resulting in a nutrient rich layer of ash which makes the soil fertile as well as temporarily eliminating weed and pest species After about three to five years the plot s productivity decreases due to depletion of nutrients along with weed and pest invasion causing the farmers to abandon the field and move to a new area The time it takes for a swidden to recover depends on the location and can be as little as five years to more than twenty years after which the plot can be slashed and burned again repeating the cycle 1 2 In Bangladesh and India the practice is known as jhum or jhoom 3 4 5 Painting by Eero Jarnefelt of forest burning Slash and burn is a type of shifting cultivation an agricultural system in which farmers routinely move from one cultivable area to another A rough estimate is that 200 million to 500 million people worldwide use slash and burn 6 better source needed Slash and burn causes temporary deforestation Ashes from the burnt trees help farmers by providing nutrients for the soil 7 In low density of human population this approach is very sustainable but the technique is not scalable for large human populations 8 A similar term is assarting which is the clearing of forests usually but not always for the purpose of agriculture Assarting does not include burning 9 Contents 1 History 2 Technique 3 Benefits and drawbacks 4 Regionally 4 1 South Asia 4 2 Americas 4 3 Northern Europe 4 3 1 Svedjebruk 4 3 2 Description of process 4 3 3 Svedjebruk culture 5 Research 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 General literature 9 Citations 10 External linksHistory EditHistorically slash and burn cultivation has been practiced throughout much of the world Fire was already used by hunter gatherers before the invention of agriculture and still is in present times Clearings created by the fire were made for many reasons such as to provide new growth for game animals and to promote certain kinds of edible plants During the Neolithic Revolution groups of hunter gatherers domesticated various plants and animals permitting them to settle down and practice agriculture which provided more nutrition per hectare than hunting and gathering Some groups could easily plant their crops in open fields along river valleys but others had forests covering their land Thus since Neolithic times slash and burn agriculture has been widely used to clear land to make it suitable for crops and livestock 10 Large groups wandering in the woodlands was once a common form of society in European prehistory The extended family burned and cultivated their swidden plots sowed one or more crops and then proceeded on to the next plot 11 Technique Edit Slash and burn agriculture in Maaninka Finland in the 1920s Slash and burn fields are typically used and owned by a family until the soil is exhausted At this point the ownership rights are abandoned the family clears a new field and trees and shrubs are permitted to grow on the former field After a few decades another family or clan may then use the land and claim usufructuary rights In such a system there is typically no market in farmland so land is not bought or sold on the open market and land rights are traditional citation needed In slash and burn agriculture forests are typically cut months before a dry season The slash is permitted to dry and then burned in the following dry season The resulting ash fertilizes the soil 12 13 and the burned field is then planted at the beginning of the next rainy season with crops such as rice maize cassava or other staples This work was once done using simple tools such as machetes axes hoes and shovels Benefits and drawbacks EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This system of agriculture provides millions of people with food and income It has been ecologically sustainable for thousands of years Because the leached soil in many tropical regions such as the Amazon are nutritionally extremely poor slash and burn is one of the only types of agriculture which can be practiced in these areas Slash and burn farmers typically plant a variety of crops instead of a monoculture and contribute to a higher biodiversity due to creating mosaic habitats The general ecosystem is not harmed in traditional slash and burn aside from a small temporary patch citation needed This technique is most unsuitable for the production of cash crops A huge amount of land or a low density of people is required for slash and burn When slash and burn is practiced in the same area too often because the human population density has increased to an unsustainable level the forest will eventually be destroyed Regionally EditSouth Asia Edit Deforestation in Indonesia to obtain palm oil Much of the country s forests are being destroyed at a very rapid rate to be replaced by palm trees Tribal groups in the northeastern Indian states of Tripura Arunachal Pradesh Meghalaya Mizoram and Nagaland and the Bangladeshi districts of Rangamati Khagrachari Bandarban and Sylhet refer to slash and burn agriculture as jhum or jhoom cultivation The system involves clearing land by fire or clear felling for economically important crops such as upland rice vegetables or fruits After a few cycles the land s fertility declines and a new area is chosen Jhum cultivation is most often practiced on the slopes of thickly forested hills Cultivators cut the treetops to allow sunlight to reach the land burning the trees and grasses for fresh soil Although it is believed that this helps fertilize the land it can leave it vulnerable to erosion Holes are made for the seeds of crops 14 such as sticky rice maize eggplant and cucumber After considering jhum s effects the government of Mizoram has introduced a policy to end the method in the state 15 Americas Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2021 Some American civilizations like the Maya have used slash and burn cultivation since ancient times Native Americans in the United States also used fire in agriculture and hunting 16 In the Amazon many peoples such as the Yanomami also live off the slash and burn method due to the Amazon s poor soil quality 17 Northern Europe Edit a recently burned area at the Telkkamaki Heritage Farm in Finland demonstrating the technique Slash and burn techniques were used in northeastern Sweden in agricultural systems In Sweden the practice is known as svedjebruk 18 Slash and burn in Smaland Sweden 1904 Telkkamaki Nature Reserve in Kaavi Finland is an open air museum where slash and burn agriculture is demonstrated Farm visitors can see how people farmed when slash and burn was the norm in the Northern Savonian region of eastern Finland beginning in the 15th century Areas of the reserve are burnt each year 19 Svedjebruk Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Svedjebruk is a Swedish and Norwegian term for slash and burn agriculture derived from the Old Norse word svida which means to burn This practice originated in Russia in the region of Novgorod and was widespread in Finland and Eastern Sweden during the Medieval period It spread to western Sweden in the 16th century when Finnish settlers were encouraged to migrate there by King Gustav Vasa to help clear the dense forests Later when the Finns were persecuted by the local Swedes svedjebruk farming was spread by refugees to eastern Norway more specifically in the eastern part of Solor in the area bordering Sweden known as Finnskogen the Finnish woods The practice also spread to New Sweden in North America Reinforced by the use of fire in agriculture and hunting by Native Americans it became an important part of pioneering in America 20 Lemurs in dry deciduous forests of Madagascar are threatened by deforestation for the creation of farmland and pasture Description of process Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Svedjebruk involved stripping a ring of bark completely around the trunk of coniferous trees like pine or spruce or felling them allowing them to dry setting fire to the dried forest and growing crops on the fertile ash covered soil The resulting ash was highly fertile but only for a short period The clearing was initially planted to rye as soon as the ash had fully settled and sufficiently cooled When the rain came it packed the ash around the rye The rye germinated and grew prolifically with anywhere from 25 to 100 stalks or straws each with multiple grains Only two tools were required the axe and the sickle The axe cut the trees to start the cycle When the rye had ripened it was harvested with a sickle which could reach among the rocks and stumps where a scythe would have been ineffective 21 In the second and third year the field would be sown with turnips or cabbages It then might be grazed for several years before being allowed to return to woodland Svedjebruk culture Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Svedjebruk required felling new forest and burning a new area every year It was necessary to allow the former fields to regrow with forest for 10 30 years before repeating the cycle As a result the dwellings were often many kilometers from the fields Furthermore since the process was man power intensive extended families tended to work together and live in compact communities The svedjebruk farming approach required a large area When forest was plentiful the Finns were very prosperous As population grew and restrictions were placed on the forest which could be burned it became increasingly difficult By 1710 during the conflict with Sweden because of their suspect loyalties Norwegian authorities considered expelling them from the border area but did not do so because it was judged they were too poor to survive if evicted Research EditThis type of agriculture is discouraged by many developmental or environmentalist organisations with the main alternatives being promoted are switching to more intensive permanent farming methods or promoting a shift from farming to working in different higher paying industries altogether Other organisations promote helping farmers achieve higher productivity by introducing new techniques Not allowing the slashed vegetation to burn completely and ploughing the resultant charcoal into the soil slash and char has been proposed as way to boost yields 22 Promoters of a project from the early 2000s claimed that slash and burn cultivation could be reduced if farmers grew black pepper crops between Inga trees which they termed Inga alley cropping 23 A method of improving the yields in a type of traditional assarting cultivation used to grow common beans in Central American called slash and cover has been proposed by additionally planting leguminous shrubs to act as a fallow crop after the soil is exhausted and one is ready to clear a new patch of forest 24 Gallery Edit Santa Cruz Bolivia Chiang Mai Thailand Arunachal Pradesh IndiaSee also Edit2006 Southeast Asian haze 2013 Southeast Asian haze 2015 Southeast Asian haze 2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires History of the forest in Central Europe Agricultural waste Scorched earthGeneral literature EditConklin H C February 1961 The Study of Shifting Cultivation PDF Current Anthropology 2 1 27 61 doi 10 1086 200160 JSTOR 2739597 S2CID 132297474 Nesholen Birger 1994 Svedjebrukerne Ostlandske Skogsomrader Den Norske Turistforening Pyne Stephen J 1997 Vestal Fire An Environmental History Told Through Fire of Europe and Europe s Encounter with the World Seattle and London University of Washington Press ISBN 0 295 97596 2 Sawyer Birgit Sawyer Peter H 1993 Medieval Scandinavia from Conversion to Reformation Circa 800 1500 University of Minnesota Press ISBN 0 8166 1739 2 Stagg Frank Noel 1956 East Norway and Its Frontier Allen amp Unwin Citations Edit Slash and burn agriculture Encyclopaedia Britannica EcoLogic Development Fund Slash and Burn Agriculture ecologic org Md Shahidul Islam 2012 Jhum In Sirajul Islam and Ahmed A Jamal ed Banglapedia National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Second ed Asiatic Society of Bangladesh Choudhury Sanjoy March April 2010 Jhum Geography and You Vol 10 no 59 Archived from the original on 4 March 2019 Disha Experts 2018 1500 MCQs with Explanatory Notes For Geography Ecology amp Environment Disha Publications p 130 Skegg Martin 24 September 2011 TV highlights 27 09 2011 The Guardian Archived from the original on 10 March 2017 Slash and Burn Agriculture An Overview of Slash and Burn Geography about com Retrieved 2013 06 22 Kukla Jaroslav Whitfeld Timothy Cajthaml Tomas Baldrian Petr Vesela Simackova Hana Novotny Vojtech Frouz Jan 2019 The effect of traditional slash and burn agriculture on soil organic matter nutrient content and microbiota in tropical ecosystems of Papua New Guinea Land Degradation amp Development 30 2 166 177 doi 10 1002 ldr 3203 ISSN 1099 145X S2CID 133993874 Assarting The Free Dictionary retrieved 2020 10 12 Jaime Awe Maya Cities and Sacred Caves Cu bola Books 2006 Clark J G D 1952 Farming Clearance and Cultivation II Prehistoric Europe The Economic Basis pg s 91 107 Cambridge Best Management Practices for Wood Ash as Agricultural Soil Amendment PDF athenaeum libs uga edu Slash and Burn Agriculture EcoLogic Development Fund www ecologic org Retrieved 2018 01 10 Jhum banglapedia org TI Trade 2011 01 17 The Assam Tribune Online Assamtribune com Retrieved 2013 06 22 Pyne 1997 470 Owl M Y 1976 Yanomamo ecology population control and their relationship to slash and burn agriculture California Anthropologist 6 2 6 20 ISSN 0272 5452 PMID 12334855 Svidna Svedjebruk and Slash amp Burn cultivation Northern Bush Retrieved 2020 10 12 Telkkamaki Nature Reserve Outdoors fi 2013 05 14 Archived from the original on 2013 07 17 Retrieved 2013 06 22 Pyne 1997 470 Video on the procedure In Youtube com Biederman L A 31 December 2012 Biochar and its effects on plant productivity and nutrient cycling a meta analysis GCB Bioenergy 5 2 202 214 doi 10 1111 gcbb 12037 S2CID 86216355 Elkan Daniel 21 April 2004 Fired with ambition The Guardian Archived from the original on 4 March 2019 Kettler S 1996 08 01 Fallow enrichment of a traditional slash mulch system in southern Costa Rica comparisons of biomass production and crop yield Agroforestry Systems 35 2 165 176 doi 10 1007 BF00122777 ISSN 0167 4366 S2CID 40357446 External links Edit Look up swidden in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikisource has original text related to this article Slash and burn Karki Sameer 2002 Community Involvement in and Management of Forest Fires in South East Asia PDF Technical report Project FireFight South East Asia Archived PDF from the original on 22 October 2018 Video of slash and burn at the Telkkamaki Nature Reserve Finland in 2012 Video of slash and burn in Sweden around 1930 32 from the YouTube channel of the Nordic Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Slash and burn amp oldid 1148951996, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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