[Main Blog Post] How the Cost of Freight Has Shaped the World
Short post this week where I barely scratch the surface of what I suspect will be a big, deep topic - how cheap transportation has been the less obvious, but maybe just as important, side of the industrial revolution next to mass production.
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I had no idea New Zealand was such a large agricultural exporter, but I suppose that makes sense the way you've described it.
And yeah, I had encountered some talk about the trouble with animal-based transport being limited by the need to bring food along or else have places you could reliably get it along the way. I'm also used to coming at this question in a military context, as supply lines and camp followers have always played a huge role in martial contexts. One book that I just realized assumes cheap transport for its recommendations is The Soldier's Load and the Mobility of a Nation by S.L.A. Marshall - he was all for having soldiers carry minimal gear, mostly fighting equipment, and then bring other needed supplies up by jeep. Hmm, I may have to look at it again sometime.