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United by grass, separated by coal: Uruguay and New Zealand during the First Globalization
2020
Journal of Global History
AbstractWhile the role of coal has been the subject of long-running debate in the historiography of the Industrial Revolution, its part in the economic development of the global periphery has been comparatively neglected. The technological context of the 'First Globalization' (c.1870–1914) made pastoral production in the periphery increasingly dependent on modern energy, as new methods of production and transportation bridged the distance between grasslands in the south of the world and
doi:10.1017/s1740022820000042
fatcat:yv4x7rremffv5odfbaxjhbxqem