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Guano Imperialism: Global Scramble for Agricultural Dominance: Excrement, Expansion, and the Fight for Fertilizer in the Pacific Ocean, 1840–1880
Coles
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Guano Imperialism: Global Scramble for Agricultural Dominance: Excrement, Expansion, and the Fight for Fertilizer in the Pacific Ocean, 1840–1880 in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $7.99


By None
Guano Imperialism: Global Scramble for Agricultural Dominance: Excrement, Expansion, and the Fight for Fertilizer in the Pacific Ocean, 1840–1880 in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $7.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Before the invention of synthetic fertilizers, the survival of global agriculture depended entirely on a single, unlikely resource: bird excrement. The desperate need to replenish exhausted European soils ignited a massive speculative frenzy that transformed barren Pacific rocks into the most contested real estate on Earth. Beneath the veneer of Victorian scientific progress lay a brutal and fiercely competitive reality. Nations risked diplomatic collapse and deployed naval armadas not for gold or silver, but to secure mountains of dried guano. This obsession quietly redrew the maps of global empire. This historical deep-dive reveals how the explosive demand for Peruvian guano birthed modern agricultural economics, exploited thousands of indentured workers, and established the aggressive resource-extraction models still used today. It traces the journey from isolated bird colonies to the bustling commodity exchanges of London and New York. Discover the bizarre and ruthless history of the world's first fertilizer monopoly, and understand how the frenzied pursuit of agricultural survival shaped the geopolitics of the modern world.
Before the invention of synthetic fertilizers, the survival of global agriculture depended entirely on a single, unlikely resource: bird excrement. The desperate need to replenish exhausted European soils ignited a massive speculative frenzy that transformed barren Pacific rocks into the most contested real estate on Earth. Beneath the veneer of Victorian scientific progress lay a brutal and fiercely competitive reality. Nations risked diplomatic collapse and deployed naval armadas not for gold or silver, but to secure mountains of dried guano. This obsession quietly redrew the maps of global empire. This historical deep-dive reveals how the explosive demand for Peruvian guano birthed modern agricultural economics, exploited thousands of indentured workers, and established the aggressive resource-extraction models still used today. It traces the journey from isolated bird colonies to the bustling commodity exchanges of London and New York. Discover the bizarre and ruthless history of the world's first fertilizer monopoly, and understand how the frenzied pursuit of agricultural survival shaped the geopolitics of the modern world.

















