Recently, marginal lands have been attracting attention as areas of high cultural and natural value that are undergoing profound, uncontrolled transformations. These changes are seen as a threat to the cohesion and identity of existing landscapes. However, ongoing processes are often difficult to interpret and evaluate without a long-term historical perspective. Here, we focused on understanding the long-term landscape dynamics in the depopulated and economically marginalized Wiar River basin, where 87% of inhabitants were displaced after World War II. A detailed, spatially explicit land-cover analysis based on eight series of topographic data (dating from 1780 to 2017), in line with the review of archival sources and literature, allowed us for identifica-tion of patterns and drivers of change. We linked the driving forces and the resulting landscape properties to four distinct historical periods (i.e. pre-industrial, industrial, socialist, and free-market). We demonstrated how the landscape of 25 villages, dominated for centuries by open farmland, shifted after WWII into exten-sively forested, and that not all regions in Europe follow the pattern of increasing rate of land-cover change.
CITATION STYLE
Affek, A. N., Zachwatowicz, M., & Solon, J. (2020). Long-term landscape dynamics in the depopulated carpathian foothills: A wiar river basin case study. Geographia Polonica, 93(1), 5–23. https://doi.org/10.7163/GPol.0160
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