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How did they harm the enviroment? And how did they effect the society?

2006-10-19 09:12:30 · 3 answers · asked by z 5000 1 in Social Science Other - Social Science

3 answers

They made it stink..........

2006-10-19 09:19:22 · answer #1 · answered by southwind 5 · 0 0

Coal got here first. Metallurgy and uncooked supplies got here 2d. Even by way of the time of the Anglo-Dutch wars, the English have been somewhat construction plenty extra beneficial and extra useful weapons for their ships. it somewhat is comprehensible that the English could pioneer the commercial Revolution as a results of fact of their power and wealth of ores, that have been without put off transmuted into steam engines, railroads, and so on. it somewhat is setting up to word that the different opposition in the commercial revolution (ie. Germany and later the U. S.) all had obtainable relatives aspects of coal (power) and metallic ores. countries who did no longer have those 2 aspects have been decreased to offering different uncooked supplies to commercial states, or slunk back into banking and funds as impartial (and as a result risk-free) havens for the commercial opposition. The forests and harbors have been superb aspects, yet that they had already been smart in the pre-commercial "Age of Sail," interior of which the Royal army fairly plenty won administration of world commerce. This gave them a marketplace for the hot industrialized products.

2016-12-08 17:32:35 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The effect on society of the industrial revolution was huge, but in the century before 1840 pretty localised. The extraordinary experiences: some people became free, or relatively free, of poverty; people began to live in very dense concentrations in what came to be called "slums" in the back-to-back houses of Small Heath (Birmingham) and of Manchester, Salford and other cotton-textile towns in Lancashire, with little or no sunlight; people began to live by clock hours instead of in rhythm with the seasons. Coal mining sttlements began to grow where the entire town was dominated by the mine. I could go on for hours - this is a vast subject.

No doubt streams and rivers were polluted, often to death of all living creatures, by human waste and by toxic waste from the cotton mills. Only now are creatures like otters and herons coming back to our waters. But we are in the early years talking about small areas (a few English counties or parts thereof like the Black Country in S Staffordshire) and output of industrial chmeicals that, though huge compared with the pre-1750 world, was small by post-(say)1880 standards.

2006-10-21 06:23:03 · answer #3 · answered by MBK 7 · 0 0

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