The Lost Fens is the history of the cultural landscape of the
Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire, and Yorkshire Fenlands from the Humber and
the Vale of York, to Norfolk. The book draws together the story of
changing landscapes, lost cultures and ways of life, and the wildlife
that has gone, too. This story of destruction is the most dramatic
example of ecological destruction in our history. Between 6,000 and
10,000 square kilometres of wetland present in the 1600s, was almost
entirely obliterated by 1900. Gone are the vast flocks of wetland birds
that filled the evening skies in winter, the frozen wetlands and the fen
skaters of the winter, and the abundant Black Terns or breeding wading
birds of the summer months. This is the history of a landscape, of a
region, and of its people, long since passed away. It is a remarkable
tale and, above all, a history of a lost ecology.