India has experienced Deforestation since 2nd Millennium BCE. Settlements in the Gangetic Plains were spread out. When the Indo-Aryans arrived they brought with them tools like Copper and Bronze, but this did not help in deforestation. Only when the use of Iron became common did deforestation began to drastically affect the Gangetic Plains. Large-scale clearing began around the 6th century BCE, driven by the need for agricultural land (specifically rice cultivation) and fuel for smelting. The
Deccan Region is believed to have been a very forested area. A research paper titled "Utilizing traditional literature to triangulate the ecological history of a tropical savanna" by Ashish Nerlekar and Digvijay Patil published in the Science journal
People and Nature, used
Marathi literature and folksongs to find out about the environment of
Desh region which is part of the Deccan. From the research it has been found out that there, the landscape has remained consistent over at least 750 years, contrary to what was believed earlier.
Deforestation started with the growth of agriculture, but was exacerbated in the nineteenth century when British commercial
forestry operations destroyed forests in mountain areas of
Kerala,
Tamil Nadu and
Karnataka. The
Gangetic plains were also heavily affected. ==Dynamics==