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Travels into North America, Volume 2 (of 3)

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About This Book

The volume offers an 18th-century traveler's systematic account of colonial North American settlements, combining natural history, agricultural practice, and social observation. It attributes rapid population growth to easy access to uncultivated land, low levies, and early marriage, illustrated through local family records. Detailed naturalist notes describe periodic swarms and caterpillar outbreaks, grass-worm infestations, and their cyclical damage to trees and crops. Domestic nuisances receive attention as well, with descriptions of clothes-eating moths, fleas, crickets, and bedbugs and their effects on household goods and animals. Interwoven with these reports are reflections on settlement patterns, farming methods, and contrasts with European conditions.

About the Author

Kalm, Pehr portrait

Pehr Kalm

Pehr Kalm was an 18th-century Swedish botanist and explorer, best known for his detailed accounts of his travels in North America. His seminal work, "Travels into North America," spans three volumes and provides valuable insights into the geography, flora, and fauna of the regions he explored, as well as observations on the indigenous peoples and colonial settlements. Kalm's writings not only contributed to the scientific understanding of North America during his time but also enriched the European perspective on the New World. His explorations and documentation remain significant in the fields of botany and natural history.

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