Online Encyclopedia

LANDES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 155 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LANDES  , an extensive natural region of

south-western France, known more strictly as the Landes de Gascogne . It has an
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area of 5400 sq. m., and occupies three-quarters of the department of Landes,
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half of that of
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Gironde, and some 175,000 acres of Lot-et-Garonne . The Landes, formerly a vast tract of moorland and marsh, now consist chiefly of fields and forests of pines . They form a plateau; shaped like a triangle, the
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base of which is the
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Atlantic coast while the
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apex is situated slightly west of
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Nerac (Lot-et-Garonne) . Its limits are, on the S. the
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river Adour; on the E. the hills of
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Armagnac, Eauzan, Condomois,
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Agenais and Bazadais; and on the N.E. the Garonne, the hills of Medoc and the Gironde . The height of the plateau ranges in general from 130 to 260 ft.; the highest altitude (498 ft.) is found in the east near Baudignan (department of Landes), from which point there is a gradual slope towards north, south, east and west . The
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soil is naturally sterile . It is composed of
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fine sand resting on a subsoil of tufa (alias) impermeable by
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water; for three-quarters of the
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year, consequently, the waters, settling on the almost level
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surface and unable to filter through, used to trans-form the country into unwholesome swamps, which the Landesats could only
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traverse on
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stilts . About the
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middle of the 18th century an engineer, Francois Chambrelent, instituted a scheme of draining and planting to remedy these evils . As a result about 1600 m. of ditches have been dug which carry off superficial water either to streams or to the lakes which fringe the landes on the west, and over 1,600,000 acres have been planted with maritime pines and oaks . The coast, for a breadth of about 4 m., and over an area of about 225,000 acres, is bordered by
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dunes, in ranges parallel to the
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shore, and from 10o to 300 ft. in height . Driven by the west wind, which is most frequent in these parts, the dunes were slowly advancing year by year towards the east, burying the cultivated lands and even the houses .

Nicolas Thomas Bremontier, towards the end of the 18th century, devised the plan of arresting this scourge by planting the dunes with maritime pines . Upwards of 210,000 acres have been thus treated . In the south-west, cork trees take the place of the pines . To prevent the formation of fresh dunes, a "dune littorale" has been formed by means of a palisade . This barrier, from 20 to 30 ft. high, presents an obstacle which the sand cannot
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cross . On the eastern side of the dunes is a series of lakes (Hourtin et Carcans, Lacanau, Cazau or Sanguinet, Biscarrosse, Aureilhan, St Julien, Leon and Soustons) separated from the sea by the heaping up of the sand . The salt water has escaped by defiltration, and they are now quite fresh . The Basin of
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Arcachon, which lies midway between the lakes of Lacanau and Cazau, still communicates with the ocean, the current of the Leyre which flows into it having sufficient force to keep a passage open .

End of Article: LANDES
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