Dataset List

Vol.|Area

Data Details

Retrieval Dataset of Historical Cropland Area in Russia (1000-2000)


ZHAO Zhilong1LI Jun1FANG Xiuqi1YE Yu1
1 Faculty of Geographical Science,Beijing Normal University,Beijing 100875,China

DOI:10.3974/geodb.2022.01.05.V1

Published:Jan. 2022

Visitors:5540       Data Files Downloaded:37      
Data Downloaded:41.38 MB      Citations:

Key Words:

Russia,cropland area,historical data retrieval,relationship models,1000-2000

Abstract:

The Retrieval Dataset of Historical Cropland Area in Russia (1000-2000) covers five historical periods of Russia, they are: Kiev Russia, Principality of Moscow, Russian Empire, Soviet Union and Russian Federation. Besides the historical cropland area records of references, the cropland areas else were calculated by the relationship models between cropland area and population, reclamation rate, grain yield and number of towns, as well as interpolation method of cultivated land area. The historical maps were the information sources for the spatial data of the dataset. The dataset included 5 groups spatial data and 3 tabular data. The spatial data includes: (1) the boundary data of the European part of Russia in 1000, 1533, 1900 and 1958; (2) the boundary data of Siberia. The tabular data includes: (1) cropland area data of Russia during 1000-2000; (2) cropland area of the European part of Russia during 1000-2000; (3) cropland area data of Siberia during 1590-2000. The dataset is archived in .shp and .xlsx data formats, and consists of 41 data files with data size of 2.18 MB (compressed to one single file with 1.11 MB).Browse

Foundation Item:

Ministry of Science and Technology of P. R. China (2017YFA0603304)

Data Citation:

ZHAO Zhilong, LI Jun, FANG Xiuqi, YE Yu. Retrieval Dataset of Historical Cropland Area in Russia (1000-2000)[J/DB/OL]. Digital Journal of Global Change Data Repository, 2022. https://doi.org/10.3974/geodb.2022.01.05.V1.

ZHAO Zhilong, LI Jun, FANG Xiuqi, et al. Cropland area dataset of the Russian Empire/Union of Soviet Socialist Republics during the past millennium (1000–2000) [J]. Journal of Global Change Data & Discovery, 2022, 6(2): 249–256.

References:

[1]Sterling, S. M., Ducharne, A., Polcher, J. The impact of global land-cover change on the terrestrial water cycle[J]. Nature Climate Change, 2012, 3(4): 385-390.
     [2]Mooney, H. A., Duraiappah, A., Larigauderie, A. Evolution of natural and social science interactions in global change research programs [J]. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2013, 110(Suppl 1): 3665-3672.
     [3]Santana-Cordero, A. M., Monteiro-Quintana, M. L., Hernández-Calvento, L. Reconstruction of the land uses that led to the termination of an arid coastal dune system: The case of the Guanarteme dune system (Canary Islands, Spain), 1834-2012 [J]. Land Use Policy, 2016, 55: 73-85.
     [4]Pongratz, J., Reick, C. H., Raddatz, T., et al. Biogeophysical versus biogeochemical climate response to historical anthropogenic land cover change [J]. Geophysical Research Letters, 2010, 37(8): L08702.
     [5]Ellis, E. C., Kaplan, J. O., Fuller, D. Q., et al. Used planet: A global history [J]. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2013, 110(20): 7978-7985.
     [6]Gaillard, R. K., Jones, C. D., Ingraham, P., et al. Underestimation of N2O emissions in a comparison of the DayCent, DNDC, and EPIC models [J]. Ecological Applications, 2017, 28(3): 694-708.
     [7]Houghton, R. A., Nassikas, A. A. Global and regional fluxes of carbon from land use and land cover change 1850-2015 [J]. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 2017, 31(3): 456-472.
     [8]IPCC. Climate change and land: An IPCC special report on climate change, desertification, land degradation, sustainable land management, food security, and greenhouse gas fluxes in terrestrial ecosystems [R/OL]. https://www.ipcc.ch/site/assets/uploads/2019/08/4.-SPM_Approved_Microsite_FINAL.pdf. 2019. 08.
     [9]Zhang, L. S., Fang, X. Q., Ren, G. Y. Global Change (2nd version) [M]. Beijing: Higher Education Press, 2017.
     [10]Fang, X. Q., He, F. N., Wu, Z. L., et al. General characteristics of the agricultural area and fractional cropland cover changes in China for the past 2000 years [J]. Acta Geographica Sinica, 2021, 76(7): 1732-1746.
     [11]Chen, Q. Q., Liu, F. G., Fang, X. Q., et al. Reconstruction of cropland distribution in the Late Neolithic periodin Northern China [J]. Geographical Research, 2019, 38(12): 2927-2940.
     [12]Fang, X. Q., Ye, Y., Zhang, C. P., et al. Cropland cover change and its environmental impactsin the history of China [J]. Journal of Palaeogeography (Chinese Edition), 2019, 21(1): 160-174.
     [13]Gaillard, M. J., Morrison, K. D., Madella, M., et al. Past land useand land-cover change: The challenge of quantification at thesubcontinental to global scales [J]. PAGES Magazine, 2018, 26(1): 1-44.
     [14]Klein Goldewijk, K., Dekker, S. C., Van Zanden, J. L. Per-capita estimations of long-term historical land use and the consequences for global changeresearch [J]. Journal of Land Use Science, 2017, 12(5): 313-337.
     [15]International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP). PAGES science plan and implementation strategy, Rep. 57 [M]. Stockholm, Sweden: IGBP Secr, 2009.
     [16]Fuchs, R., Verburg, P. H., Clevers, J. G. P. W., et al. The potential of old maps and encyclopaedias for reconstructing historic European land cover/use change [J]. Applied Geography, 2015, 59: 43-55.
     [17]Kaplan, J. O., Krumhardt, K. M., Gaillard, M., et al. Constraining the deforestation history of Europe: evaluation of historical land use scenarios with pollen-based land cover reconstructions [J]. Land, 2017, 6(4): 91.
     [18]Li, M. J., He, F. N., Li, S. C., et al. Reconstruction of the cropland cover changes in eastern China between the 10th century and 13th century using historical documents [J]. Scientific Reports, 2018, 8(1): 13552.
     [19]Ramankutty, N., Foley, J. A. Estimating historical changes in global land cover: croplands from 1700 to 1992 [J]. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 1999, 13(4): 997-1027.
     [20]Kaplan, J. O., Krumhardt, K. M., Ellis, E. C., et al. Holocene carbon emissions as a result of anthropogenic land cover change [J]. The Holocene, 2011, 21(5): 775-791.
     [21]Pongratz, J., Reick, C. H., Raddatz, T., et al. A reconstruction of global agricultural areas and land cover for the last millennium [J]. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 2008, 22(3): GB3018.
     [22]Yang, X. H., Jin, X. B., Du, X. D., et al. Multi-agent model-based historical cropland spatial pattern reconstruction for 1661-1952, Shandong Province, China [J]. Global and Planetary Change, 2016, 143: 175-188.
     [23]Fang, X. Q., Xiao, L. B., Su, Y., et al. Social impacts of climate change on the history of China [J]. Journal of Palaeogeography (Chinese Edition), 2017, 17(4): 745-752.
     [24]Yuan, C., Ye, Y., Tang, C. C., et al. Accuracy comparison of gridded historical cultivated land data in Jiangsu and Anhui Provinces [J]. China Geographical Sciences, 2017, 27(2): 273-285.
     [25]Wei, X. Q., Ye, Y., Zhang, Q., et al. Reconstruction of cropland change over the past 300 years in the Jing-Jin-Ji area, China [J]. Regional Environmental Change, 2016, 16(7): 2097-2109.
     [26]He, F. N., Li, M. J., Li, S. C. Reconstruction of Lu-level cropland areas in the Northern Song Dynasty (AD976-1078) [J]. Journal of Geographical Sciences, 2017, 27(5): 606-618.
     [27]Li, S. C., Wang, Z. F., Zhang, Y. L. Crop cover reconstruction and its effects on sediment retention in the Tibetan Plateau for 1900-2000 [J]. Journal of Geographical Sciences, 2017, 27(7): 786-800.
     [28]Kalesnik, S. V. The General Introduction of Geography in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics [M]. Department of foreign languages, Jilin Normal University., Institute of foreign studies., translated. Changchun: Jilin People’s Publishing House, 1978.
     [29]Victor, M., Alexander, V. P., Martin, R. J., et al. Spatial determinants and underlying drivers of land-use transitions in European Russia from 1770 to 2010 [J]. Journal of Land Use Science, 2019, 14(4-6): 362-377.
     [30]Novenko, E., Shilov, P., Khitrov, D., et al. The last hundred years of land use history in the southern part of Valdai Hills (European Russia): reconstruction by pollen and historical Data [J]. Studia Quaternaria, 2017, 34(2): 73-81.
     [31]Chernova, O. V., Ryzhova, I. M., Podvezennaya, M. A. The effect of historical and regional features of land use on the size and structure of carbon pools in the southern Taiga and forest-steppe zones of European Russia [J]. Eurasian Soil Science, 2018, 51(6): 709-719.
     [32]Tomson, P., Bunce, R. G. H., Sepp, K. The role of slash and burn cultivation in the formation of southern Estonian landscapes and implications for nature conservation [J]. Landscape and Urban Planning, 2015, 137: 54-63.
     [33]Kukushkina, O. V., Alyabina, I. O., Golubinskii, A. A. Experience in reconstruction of agricultural land use for Balakhna District of Nizhniy Novgorod Gubernia in the 18th-19th centuries (on the basis of cartographic sources) [J]. Eurasian Soil Science, 2018, 51(7): 803-813.
     [34]Gilbert, M. The Routledge Atlas of Russian History [M]. Wang, Y. H., translated. Beijing: China Youth Press, 2012.
     [35]Department for History and Philosophy of Lomonosov Moscow State University. The agriculture of Grand Duchy of Moscow in the 16th century [M]. Moscow: Lomonosov Moscow State University Press, 1899.
     [36]Xu, J. X. Review and Prospect of the development of the eastern region of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics - four hundred years of the development of Siberia [M]. Changchun: Northeast Normal University Press, 1988.
     [37]He, S. G. Comparative development history [M]. Beijing: World Publishing Corporation, 2002.
     [38]Xu, J. X. The history of Siberia [M]. Harbin: Heilongjiang Education Press, 1991.
     [39]Alan, W. The history of Siberia: From Russian conquest to Revolution [M]. London and New York: Routledge, 1991.
     [40]Janet, M. H. Siberia: A history of the people [M]. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2014.
     [41]Mironov, B. N. Life History of the Tsarist Russia Age [M]. Zhang, G. X., Xu, J. Q., Zhong, J. P., translated. Beijing: The Commercial Press, 2012.
     [42]Gorushkin, L. M.,Song, J. H.Commonalities and characteristics of Siberian agricultural development from the second half of the 19th century to the beginning of the 20th century [J]. Siberian Studies, 2004, 31(1): 52-59.
     [43]James, H. Stalin, Siberia and the crisis of The New Economic Policy [M]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991.
     [44]Central Bureau of Statistics of the Council of Ministers of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Statistical yearbook of national economy of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics in 1959 [M]. Mei, G. Y., translated. Beijing:World Affairs Press, 1960.
     [45]Federal State Statistics Service. Russian Statistical Yearbook 2003 [M]. Moscow: Rosstat, 2003.
     [46]Zhang, Z. E. Agriculture in Siberia and the Far East of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics [J]. Journal of Foreign Studies, 1986, 1: 55-59.
     [47]Zibaoluha, И. M. Conquering Siberia: from Yermark to Bering [M]. Beijing: China Social Sciences Press, 2017.
     [48]Li, S. C., He, F. N., Chen, Y. S. Gridding reconstruction of cropland spatial patterns in Southwest China in the Qing Dynasty [J]. Progress in Geography, 2012, 31(9): 1196-1203.
     [49]Zhao, Z. L., Fang, X. Q., Ye, Y., et al. Reconstruction of cropland area in the European part of Tsarist Russia from 1696 to 1914 based on historical documents [J]. Journal of Geographical Sciences, 2020, 30(8): 1307-1324.
     

Data Product:

ID Data Name Data Size Operation
0Datapaper_CroplandRussia_1000-2000.pdf203.00kbDownLoad
1 CroplandRussia_1000-2000.rar 1145.22KB
Co-Sponsors
Superintend