Drought, not lack of ‘working rivers’, may have helped spur transition to steam power in Britain’s industrial revolution

Britain’s transition from water power to coal-based steam power set the stage for the 19th century Industrial Revolution, which transformed much of Europe and North America into predominantly urban and industrialized societies. One long-held argument for this move ‘away from the water’ has been that Britain no longer had sufficient water resources to satisfy the increasing power demands of its textile mills.