How are the forest destroyed during the colonial period
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India was british colony and British took alk advantage of it .
They cut the trees of forest and took the trunks and timbers for shipbuilding and for making railway tracks ,some British officials even took quality woids out of forest to nake furniture out of them so this way forest were destroyed.
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Answer : By the early nineteenth century, oak forests in England were disappearing. This created a problem of timber supply for the Royal Navy.
By the 1820s, search parties were sent to explore the forest resources of India.
Within a decade, trees were being felled on a massive scale and vast quantities of timber were being exported from India.
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 colonial government took over the forests, and gave vast areas to European planters at cheap rates.
The spread of railways from the 1850s created a new demand.
Railways were essential for colonial trade and for the movement of imperial troops.
To run locomotives, wood was needed as fuel, and to lay railway lines sleepers were essential to hold the tracks together.
Forests around the railway tracks fast started disappearing.
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