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Three stages in the history of land reclamation in the Netherlands

โœ Scribed by Robert J. Hoeksema


Book ID
102867750
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
850 KB
Volume
56
Category
Article
ISSN
1531-0353

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โœฆ Synopsis


The Netherlands has faced unique water management challenges. Much of the western part of this country is covered by compressible peat or clay soils. Historic land use practices resulted in loss, decay, and consolidation of these soils and subsequent land subsidence. This, along with the sea level rise, tides, and storms, resulted in a country where one-third of the land lies below mean sea level and without dunes, dikes, and pumps, 65% would be under water at high tide.

Over many centuries the Dutch have fought against this loss of land. Three stages in the historical development of land drainage and reclamation activities are presented.

The first stage was in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries when many lakes north of Amsterdam were drained and reclaimed for agricultural use. Windmills were used to pump these lakes dry. Next, in the nineteenth century, Lake Haarlem became the largest lake drained in the Netherlands and the one of the first to be drained using steam-powered pumps alone. Finally, in the twentieth century the Zuiderzee tidal estuary was drained and reclaimed, resulting in an additional 1650 km 2 of new land for agriculture, recreation, and urban expansion.


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Since the 12th century AD land reclamation is carried out in The Netherlands. Numerous shallow, salt or freshwater lakes were pumped dry, changing the lakes into polders. These persistent pumping activities have caused substantial land subsidence in the areas surrounding these polders. In order to a