167 results
Search Results
2. The Stonehenge bluestones did not come from Waun Mawn in West Wales.
- Author
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John, Brian
- Subjects
- *
BUILDING stones , *GLACIAL drift , *NEOLITHIC Period , *ARCHAEOLOGISTS - Abstract
This paper examines the hypothesis that Waun Mawn in West Wales provided the bluestone monoliths that were used at Stonehenge. Some archaeologists believe that the site supports the last remains of a giant stone circle or 'Proto Stonehenge' which was dismantled and transported to Salisbury Plain around 5000 years ago. It was claimed, after three excavation seasons at Waun Mawn in 2017, 2018 and 2021, that there is firm evidence of some standing stones which were later removed or broken up, but it has still not been demonstrated that there ever was a small stone circle here, let alone a 'giant' one. Furthermore, there have been no control studies in the neighbourhood which might demonstrate that the speculative feature has any unique characteristics. There is nothing at Waun Mawn to link this site in any way to Stonehenge, and this is confirmed by recent cited research. No evidence has been brought forward in support of the claim that 'this was one of the great religious and political centres of Neolithic Britain'. It is concluded that at Waun Mawn and elsewhere in West Wales there has been substantial 'interpretative inflation' driven by the desire to demonstrate a Stonehenge connection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Archaeological Stratigraphy and the Bifurcation of Time: Solido intra solidum.
- Author
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Lucas, Gavin
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,STRATIGRAPHIC geology ,TIME ,STRATIGRAPHIC archaeology ,FOSSILS - Abstract
The goal of this paper is to explore the ways solidity and fluidity have been articulated in relation to understandings of time and the archaeological record. It reflects on the paradox that led the 17th-century Danish scholar Nicholas Steno to write one of the first discourses on stratigraphy: how can solid objects (such as fossils) occur within other solid objects (rock)? His dissertation (De solido intra solidum naturalitur contento, 1669) offered the simple solution: the containing solid was once a fluid. However, such a solution came at a cost which still haunts contemporary understanding of the archaeological record: a bifurcation of time into past and present expressed through the ideas of archaeological statics and dynamics. In addressing the way 'solid fluids' are entangled with time and archaeological stratigraphy, this paper attempts to draw novel perspectives on all three. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Archaeology and landscape in central Italy: papers in memory.
- Author
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Launaro, Alessandro
- Subjects
- *
ARCHAEOLOGY , *NONFICTION - Abstract
The article reviews the book "Archaeology and Landscape in Central Italy: Papers In Memory of John A. Lloyd," edited by Gary Lock and Amalia Faustoferri.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Assessing charcoal and phytolith signals for pre-Columbian land-use based on modern indigenous activity areas in the Upper Xingu, Amazonia.
- Author
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Watling, Jennifer, Schmidt, Morgan, Heckenberger, Michael, Lima, Helena, Moraes, Bruno, Waura, Kumessi, Kuikuro, Huke, Kuikuro, Taku Wate, Kuikuro, Utu, and Kuikuro, Afukaka
- Subjects
- *
CHARCOAL , *INDIGENOUS peoples of South America , *INDIGENOUS children , *PHYTOLITHS , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *CULTURAL policy , *CULTURAL property - Abstract
The nature and extent of past indigenous transformations in the Amazon basin is an actively debated topic, and one that has important implications for both conservation policy and the cultural heritage of its indigenous and traditional populations. The use of charcoal and phytoliths to measure past human impacts in non-lacustrine settings has become especially influential in this debate but has also generated disagreement among scholars regarding the possible limits of these proxies for detecting ancient land-use. To contribute empirical data to this issue, our paper presents the first attempt to study charcoal and phytolith signals from areas of modern indigenous land-use, in the Xingu Indigenous Territory, southern Amazonia. Our findings show that, while charcoal and early successional herb phytoliths are good indicators of land-use intensity, certain types of land-use leave subtler traces in the phytolith record that can hinder their detection. We demonstrate how using finer sampling resolution and comparing local proxy data on their own terms are necessary steps in order to identify trends in human land-use across time and space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The Longleaf Tree-Ring Network: Reviewing and expanding the utility of Pinus palustris Mill. Dendrochronological data.
- Author
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Harley, Grant L, Therrell, Matthew D, Maxwell, Justin T, Bhuta, Arvind, Bregy, Joshua C, Heeter, Karen J, Patterson, Thomas, Rochner, Maegen, Rother, Monica T, Stambaugh, Michael, Zampieri, Nicole E, Altman, Jan, Collins-Key, Savannah A, Gentry, Christopher M, Guiterman, Christopher, Huffman, Jean M, Johnson, Daniel J, King, Daniel J, Larson, Evan R, and Leland, Caroline
- Subjects
- *
LONGLEAF pine , *TREE-rings , *CLIMATE research , *DENDROCHRONOLOGY , *BUILDING design & construction , *WOOD , *PRIMARY productivity (Biology) - Abstract
The longleaf pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) and related ecosystem is an icon of the southeastern United States (US). Once covering an estimated 37 million ha from Texas to Florida to Virginia, the near-extirpation of, and subsequent restoration efforts for, the species has been well-documented over the past ca. 100 years. Although longleaf pine is one of the longest-lived tree species in the southeastern US—with documented ages of over 400 years—its use has not been reviewed in the field of dendrochronology. In this paper, we review the utility of longleaf pine tree-ring data within the applications of four primary, topical research areas: climatology and paleoclimate reconstruction, fire history, ecology, and archeology/cultural studies. Further, we highlight knowledge gaps in these topical areas, for which we introduce the Longleaf Tree-Ring Network (LTRN). The overarching purpose of the LTRN is to coalesce partners and data to expand the scientific use of longleaf pine tree-ring data across the southeastern US. As a first example of LTRN analytics, we show that the development of seasonwood chronologies (earlywood width, latewood width, and total width) enhances the utility of longleaf pine tree-ring data, indicating the value of these seasonwood metrics for future studies. We find that at 21 sites distributed across the species' range, latewood width chronologies outperform both their earlywood and total width counterparts in mean correlation coefficient (RBAR = 0.55, 0.46, 0.52, respectively). Strategic plans for increasing the utility of longleaf pine dendrochronology in the southeastern US include [1] saving remnant material (e.g., stumps, logs, and building construction timbers) from decay, extraction, and fire consumption to help extend tree-ring records, and [2] developing new chronologies in LTRN spatial gaps to facilitate broad-scale analyses of longleaf pine ecosystems within the context of the topical groups presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. 'The Battle for Abu Simbel': Archaeology and Postcolonial Diplomacy in the UNESCO Campaign for Nubia.
- Author
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Hill, Adam C.
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,DIPLOMACY ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,EXPERTISE ,ARCHAEOLOGISTS ,DAMS ,MUMMIES - Abstract
This essay examines the role and agency of British archaeologists in the discussions surrounding Egypt's construction of the Aswan High Dam beginning in the late 1950s. The dam was conceived as a grand engineering project that would create new farmland and make Egypt self-sufficient in terms of its energy needs, but flooding caused by the dam threatened to destroy numerous archaeological sites along the Nile River on the border of Egypt and Sudan. With the blessing of the Egyptian and Sudanese governments, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) launched a complex rescue operation in 1960 with the goal of surveying the affected sites, in some cases removing entire structures to safe locations. Despite Britain's initial reluctance—four years after the Suez crisis—to participate in a program that would benefit an avowedly hostile regime, British scientific expertise and private fundraising soon came to play an important role in UNESCO's 'Campaign for Nubia'. Using diplomatic papers and the records of various scientific bodies, I will argue that British participation in the UNESCO archaeological program was a crucial avenue for Anglo-Egyptian rapprochement during the 1960s and 1970s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Foucault's history of the present as self-referential knowledge acquisition.
- Author
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Baert, Patrick
- Abstract
Underlying this article is the conviction that social scientists typically take on board a too restrictive concept of knowledge acquisition. The paper propounds a new concept of knowledge acquisition, one which is self-referential (i.e. which affects one's presuppositions) and which draws upon the unfamiliar to reveal and undercut the familiar. The aim of this paper is twofold. First, it is to show that this concept of knowledge acqui sition is already anticipated by Foucault, that it is a major concern of his, and that it is a common thread throughout his work. Consequently, a new light can be thrown on both Foucault's archaeology and his genealogy: both are directed towards a self-referential form of knowledge, and as such the two periods are shown to have more in common than conventionally assumed. Second (and conversely), the aim of the paper is to elucidate this self-referential type of knowledge by showing how it is used by Foucault. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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9. T-shaped craft researchers' contribution in transdisciplinary research projects.
- Author
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Groth, Camilla, Høgseth, Harald Bentz, Melin, Karl-Magnus, and Leijonhufvud, Fredrik
- Subjects
RESEARCH personnel ,SALVAGE archaeology ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,KNOWLEDGE transfer ,ART education ,ARCHAEOLOGISTS - Abstract
Transdisciplinary project groups are promoted as a way for coping with the growing complexity of research environments. In the context of archaeology and conservation, the knowhow of practitioner-researchers in crafts has potential in supporting the reconstruction of past events as well as the material and technical background factors. As education in the arts and crafts have gradually moved from the workshops into academic institutions, artisans enter higher education and can pursue research careers. In cases where an artisan with longitudinal craft experience conducts research training in a related area, such as archaeology or conservation, we can speak of T-shaped practitioners. In this article, we will present three examples of research conducted by Scandinavian practitioner-researchers who are professional crafts practitioners in wood, but also archaeologists / conservators. We discuss the potentials of practitioner-researchers in craft for facilitating experiential knowledge transfer between project members of different disciplines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. G. Leslie Adkin (1888–1964) and glaciation of the Tararua Range, North Island, New Zealand.
- Author
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Brook, Martin
- Subjects
TARARUA Range (N.Z.) ,GLACIATION ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL research ,EARTH sciences - Abstract
Research initiated in 1909 by G. Leslie Adkin (1888–1964) suggested that the central Tararua Range on the North Island, New Zealand, was subjected to only limited alpine-style glaciation during the Late Pleistocene. This was based on the ‘U-shaped’ cross-profiles in the uppermost parts of several valleys, and cirque basins. Findings were published in Transactions of the New Zealand Institute, but were not met with universal acceptance by luminaries such as Charles Cotton. Adkin’s work remained the only published glacial research undertaken on the North Island’s axial ranges until the latter part of the 20th century. Adkin holds a special position in New Zealand science, because although he worked full-time as a farmer he published nearly 40 articles in scientific journals on topics as varied as Māori archaeology and geoscience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Extension of the New Zealand kauri (Agathis australis) chronology to 1724 BC.
- Author
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Boswijk, Gretel, Fowler, Anthony, Lorrey, Andrew, Palmer, Jonathan, and Ogden, John
- Subjects
TREE-rings ,KAURI ,DENDROCLIMATOLOGY ,CARBON isotopes ,GLOBAL environmental change ,FOSSILS ,SWAMPS ,WETLANDS ,ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
Long tree-ring chronologies have been constructed in the Northern Hemisphere for dendroclimatology and palaeoenvironmental studies, radiocarbon calibration and archaeological dating. Numerous tree-ring chronologies have also been built in the Southern Hemisphere, primarily for dendroclimatology, but multimillennial chronologies are rare. Development of long chronologies from the Southern Hemisphere is therefore important to provide a long-term perspective on environmental change at local, regional and global scales. This paper describes the extension of the New Zealand Agathis australis (kauri) chronology from AD 911 to 1724 BC. Subfossil (swamp) kauri was collected from 17 swamp sites in the upper North Island. Kauri timbers were also obtained from an early twentieth century house on the University of Auckland campus. Twelve site chronologies and 11 independent tree-sequences were constructed and crossmatched to produce a 3631-yr record, which was calendar dated to 1724 BC–AD 1907 against the modern kauri master chronology. A new long chronology, AGAUc04a, was built by combining the modern kauri data with house timbers and subfossil kauri. This new chronology spans 1724 BC–AD 1998. It is of similar length to chronologies from Tasmania and South America and is the longest tree-ring chronology yet built in New Zealand. The greatest significance of the long kauri chronology lies in its potential as a high–quality palaeoclimate proxy, especially with regard to investigation of the El Niño–Southern Oscillation phenomenon. The chronology also has application to investigation of extreme environmental events, dendroecology, archaeology and radiocarbon calibration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Foucault and the problem of the subject.
- Author
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McGushin, Edward
- Subjects
MODERN philosophy ,METAPHYSICS ,SUBJECTIVITY ,LECTURES & lecturing - Abstract
This paper examines the relevance of Foucault's later work to debates in contemporary Continental philosophy concerning the problem of the subject. It shows that Foucault shifts attention away from the history of metaphysics and the metaphysics of the subject to an analysis of the concrete forms of institutional practice and embodiment that shape philosophical discourses. As a result, we are able to see this debate in a different light. In particular, we can grasp the deconstruction of the subject, especially as it is articulated by Critchley and Derrida, in the context of a genealogy of philosophy as care of the self and spiritual exercise. The paper concludes by arguing that Foucault's work forces us to understand philosophical concepts and problems -- and the problem of the subject in particular -- in light of the contexts of power, knowledge and subjectivity within which they function and against which they struggle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Between China and South Asia: A Middle Asian corridor of crop dispersal and agricultural innovation in the Bronze Age.
- Author
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Stevens, Chris J., Murphy, Charlene, Roberts, Rebecca, Lucas, Leilani, Silva, Fabio, and Fuller, Dorian Q.
- Subjects
- *
BRONZE Age , *AGRICULTURAL innovations , *PLANT remains (Archaeology) - Abstract
The period from the late third millennium BC to the start of the first millennium AD witnesses the first steps towards food globalization in which a significant number of important crops and animals, independently domesticated within China, India, Africa and West Asia, traversed Central Asia greatly increasing Eurasian agricultural diversity. This paper utilizes an archaeobotanical database (AsCAD), to explore evidence for these crop translocations along southern and northern routes of interaction between east and west. To begin, crop translocations from the Near East across India and Central Asia are examined for wheat (Triticum aestivum) and barley (Hordeum vulgare) from the eighth to the second millennia BC when they reach China. The case of pulses and flax (Linum usitatissimum) that only complete this journey in Han times (206 BC–AD 220), often never fully adopted, is also addressed. The discussion then turns to the Chinese millets, Panicum miliaceum and Setaria italica, peaches (Amygdalus persica) and apricots (Armeniaca vulgaris), tracing their movement from the fifth millennium to the second millennium BC when the Panicum miliaceum reaches Europe and Setaria italica Northern India, with peaches and apricots present in Kashmir and Swat. Finally, the translocation of japonica rice from China to India that gave rise to indica rice is considered, possibly dating to the second millennium BC. The routes these crops travelled include those to the north via the Inner Asia Mountain Corridor, across Middle Asia, where there is good evidence for wheat, barley and the Chinese millets. The case for japonica rice, apricots and peaches is less clear, and the northern route is contrasted with that through northeast India, Tibet and west China. Not all these journeys were synchronous, and this paper highlights the selective long-distance transport of crops as an alternative to demic-diffusion of farmers with a defined crop package. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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14. Settlement, landscape and land-use change at a Pictish Elite Centre: Assessing the palaeoecological record for economic continuity and social change at Rhynie in NE Scotland.
- Author
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Jones, Samantha E, Evans, Nick, Cortizas, Antonio Martínez, Mighall, Tim M, and Noble, Gordon
- Subjects
- *
ELITE (Social sciences) , *PALEOECOLOGY , *SOCIAL change , *LANDSCAPE changes , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL archives , *TRANSFORMATIVE learning - Abstract
The first millennium AD was a transformative period when many of the medieval kingdoms of Europe began to take shape, but despite recent advances in palaeoecological and archaeological research there remains a shortage of interdisciplinary collaborative research targeting this period. For some regions we know relatively little about the societies who lived during this formative period. This current investigation focusses on an early medieval elite centre near to Rhynie in NE Scotland; an important power-centre during the fourth–seventh centuries AD as evidenced by a remarkable series of Class I Pictish symbol stones, fortified enclosures at Cairn more, Tap o' Noth and the Craw-Stane, as well as high status metal-working and a range of continental imports from the Craw-Stane enclosure. However, by the end of the seventh century AD, elite focus appears to have shifted elsewhere with the Craw-Stane and Cairn More enclosures all being abandoned. By combining paleoenvironmental analysis with available historical and archaeological archives this paper provides new insights into societal change during the first Millennium AD, with focus on the economic, social and environmental impacts caused by the rise and subsequent abandonment of elite nodes of power. A calibrated age of AD 260–415, near the base of the core, coincides with the earliest dates for the Craw-Stane complex and pre-dates the construction of the nearby Cairn More enclosure. The results provide a rare snapshot of the Late Roman Iron Age to Medieval environment of Northeast Scotland. This centre appears to have been supported by a rich agricultural landscape, with evidence of pastoral and arable farming, and potential metal working. One of the most significant findings of this study has revealed that despite abandonment of these elite enclosed sites by the seventh century AD, people continued to utilise the surrounding landscape and available resources right through until modern times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Holocene book review: 3D Recording and Modelling in Archaeology and Cultural Heritage: Theory and Best Practices.
- Author
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De Reu, Jeroen
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,NONFICTION - Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Ancient states and ordinary people: A feminist re-imagining of ancient Maya power and the everyday.
- Author
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Blackmore, Chelsea
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,SCHISM ,FEMINIST theory ,FEMINISM ,INTELLECTUAL history - Abstract
Maya archaeology continues to be defined by a schism between ‘politic/s and state’ and ‘everyday life and ordinary people.’ Using feminist theory, this paper deconstructs this dichotomy by considering the intellectual history and theoretical perspectives that continue to reify these boundaries and its connections to modern neoliberal discourses. How we conceive of the state – of what it is, and how it interacts with the rest of society – is at the heart of neo-evolutionary models of state formation; these impact our understanding of how ancient Maya society operated and the ways in which power, politics and class function. Archaeological fascination with elites and rulers, both in scholarly and public circles, creates a narrative focused on individual achievement, and a quest for wealth and material access; values lauded by the neoliberal state. Alternative readings of complexity illustrate that everyday life of ordinary people is nuanced, intentional, and inherently political. Such work forces us to reconsider this dichotomy and recognize it as a dialectical and mutually constitutive process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Republicanism and Imperialism at the Frontier: A Post-Black Lives Matter Archeology of International Relations.
- Author
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Shilliam, Robbie
- Subjects
BROWN v. Board of Education of Topeka ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,REPUBLICANISM ,BLACK Lives Matter movement ,ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Millennium (03058298) is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Impacts of mid- to late-Holocene land use on residual hill geomorphology: A remote sensing and archaeological evaluation of human-related soil erosion in central Karnataka, South India.
- Author
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Bauer, Andrew M
- Subjects
GEOMORPHOLOGY ,SOIL erosion research ,HOLOCENE Epoch ,LAND use ,ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
This paper describes the impacts of Neolithic Period (c. 5000–3200 cal. BP) and Iron Age (c. 3200–2300 cal. BP) occupation and land use on the geomorphology of residual hills that punctuate an expansive planation surface in central Karnataka, South India. Analyses of archaeological survey data, soil and regolith profiles, remotely sensed metrics of hill morphology and distributions of soil and sediment, and paleoecological data indicate that cultural land use altered the morphology of these features and the distribution of soils on them, and consequently impacted the processes by which they continued to develop. Statistical regression models indicate that archaeological evidence for ancient land use is a significant explanatory variable for the proportion of remaining soil cover and exposed residual rock on the sampled hills. Moreover, multivariate regression models explaining soil removal on the hills are effective when including archaeological proxies for ancient land use along with other geomorphological variables. The combined effects of intensified agro-pastoral land use, vegetation changes, and variations in climatic humidity during the mid-Holocene to late Holocene appear to have facilitated erosional conditions that outpaced subsurface weathering. These findings imply that the refinement of models for the development of residual hills in South India, where early paradigms for explaining the evolution of such landforms were formalized, should consider the effects of Holocene land use where applicable. The findings also suggest that recent efforts to understand the unique ecology of these landforms should account for historical human land use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A palynological contribution to the environmental archaeology of a Mediterranean mountain wetland (North West Apennines, Italy).
- Author
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Guido, Maria A, Menozzi, Bruna I, Bellini, Cristina, Placereani, Sandra, and Montanari, Carlo
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,WETLANDS ,CULTURAL property ,VEGETATION dynamics ,PALEOECOLOGY ,PALEOLITHIC Period - Abstract
Within the framework of a regional research project on wetlands as cultural heritage sites, an attempt was made to examine the natural and anthropogenic causes driving the vegetation dynamics and exploitation of a small mountain wetland. To assess its potential use as an archive of the landscape history, an environmental archaeology approach was used: palaeoenvironmental data from traditional pollen sampling by coring were matched with stratigraphic information from an excavation area of several square metres, and plant micro- and macroremain analyses (e.g. pollen assemblages, micro- and macrocharcoal, morphological and dendrochronological features of waterlogged tree trunks) were compared in order to evaluate them as effects of different environmental factors and to pinpoint these factors. In this paper, the focus is set mainly on the results originating from pollen analyses of a core drilled in the peat-bog, a few metres from the stratigraphic excavation. The start of peat deposition, sometimes coinciding with human activity, was dated around 10,000 cal. BP. The impact on the vegetation surrounding the site is clearly recorded in the pollen assemblages only from the Roman period (2010–1820 cal. BP) even though a long history of human presence is archaeologically documented in the area since the Palaeolithic. Since that time, the abrupt decline of fir favoured the final spread of beech which, in turn, in the Middle Ages (1180–790 cal. BP) leaves space to grassland exploitable for pasture and for agro-silvi-pastoral activities. This site has proven to be of great importance for the Holocene history of the silver fir. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Holocene landscape dynamics and long-term population trends in the Levant.
- Author
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Palmisano, Alessio, Woodbridge, Jessie, Roberts, C Neil, Bevan, Andrew, Fyfe, Ralph, Shennan, Stephen, Cheddadi, Rachid, Greenberg, Raphael, Kaniewski, David, Langgut, Dafna, Leroy, Suzanne AG, Litt, Thomas, and Miebach, Andrea
- Subjects
- *
HOLOCENE Epoch , *LANDSCAPES , *POPULATION , *VEGETATION dynamics , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations - Abstract
This paper explores long-term trends in human population and vegetation change in the Levant from the early to the late Holocene in order to assess when and how human impact has shaped the region's landscapes over the millennia. To do so, we employed multiple proxies and compared archaeological, pollen and palaeoclimate data within a multi-scalar approach in order to assess how Holocene landscape dynamics change at different geographical scales. We based our analysis on 14 fossil pollen sequences and applied a hierarchical agglomerative clustering and community classification in order to define groups of vegetation types (e.g. grassland, wetland, woodland, etc.). Human impact on the landscape has been assessed by the analysis of pollen indicator groups. Archaeological settlement data and Summed Probability Distribution (SPD) of radiocarbon dates have been used to reconstruct long-term demographic trends. In this study, for the first time, the evolution of the human population is estimated statistically and compared with environmental proxies for assessing the interplay of biotic and abiotic factors in shaping the Holocene landscapes in the Levant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The changing face of the Mediterranean – Land cover, demography and environmental change: Introduction and overview.
- Author
-
Bevan, Andrew, Palmisano, Alessio, Woodbridge, Jessie, Fyfe, Ralph, Roberts, C Neil, and Shennan, Stephen
- Subjects
- *
LAND cover , *DEMOGRAPHY , *HUMAN ecology , *PALYNOLOGY , *GEOMORPHOLOGY , *PALEOCLIMATOLOGY - Abstract
This paper introduces a special issue on The Changing Face of the Mediterranean: Land Cover, Demography, and Environmental Change, which brings together up-to-date regional or thematic perspectives on major long-term trends in Mediterranean human–environment relations. Particularly, important insights are provided by palynology to reconstruct past vegetation and land cover, and archaeology to establish long-term demographic trends, but with further significant input from palaeoclimatology, palaeofire research and geomorphology. Here, we introduce the rationale behind this pan-Mediterranean research initiative, outline its major sources of evidence and method, and describe how individual submissions work to complement one another. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Long-term trends of land use and demography in Greece: A comparative study.
- Author
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Weiberg, Erika, Bevan, Andrew, Kouli, Katerina, Katsianis, Markos, Woodbridge, Jessie, Bonnier, Anton, Engel, Max, Finné, Martin, Fyfe, Ralph, Maniatis, Yannis, Palmisano, Alessio, Panajiotidis, Sampson, Roberts, C Neil, and Shennan, Stephen
- Subjects
- *
LAND use , *DEMOGRAPHY , *NEOLITHIC Period , *PROBABILITY density function , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations - Abstract
This paper offers a comparative study of land use and demographic development in northern and southern Greece from the Neolithic to the Byzantine period. Results from summed probability densities (SPD) of archaeological radiocarbon dates and settlement numbers derived from archaeological site surveys are combined with results from cluster-based analysis of published pollen core assemblages to offer an integrated view of human pressure on the Greek landscape through time. We demonstrate that SPDs offer a useful approach to outline differences between regions and a useful complement to archaeological site surveys, evaluated here especially for the onset of the Neolithic and for the Final Neolithic (FN)/Early Bronze Age (EBA) transition. Pollen analysis highlight differences in vegetation between the two sub-regions, but also several parallel changes. The comparison of land cover dynamics between two sub-regions of Greece further demonstrates the significance of the bioclimatic conditions of core locations and that apparent oppositions between regions may in fact be two sides of the same coin in terms of socio-ecological trajectories. We also assess the balance between anthropogenic and climate-related impacts on vegetation and suggest that climatic variability was as an important factor for vegetation regrowth. Finally, our evidence suggests that the impact of humans on land cover is amplified from the Late Bronze Age (LBA) onwards as more extensive herding and agricultural practices are introduced. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. From features to fingerprints: A general diagnostic framework for anthropogenic geomorphology.
- Author
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Tarolli, Paolo, Cao, Wenfang, Sofia, Giulia, Evans, Damian, and Ellis, Erle C.
- Subjects
- *
GEOMORPHOLOGY , *SURFACE structure , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *REMOTE sensing , *PHOTOGRAMMETRY - Abstract
Human societies have been reshaping the geomorphology of landscapes for thousands of years, producing anthropogenic geomorphic features ranging from earthworks and reservoirs to settlements, roads, canals, ditches and plough furrows that have distinct characteristics compared with landforms produced by natural processes. Physical geographers have long recognized the widespread importance of these features in altering landforms and geomorphic processes, including hydrologic flows and stores, to processes of soil erosion and deposition. In many of the same landscapes, archaeologists have also utilized anthropogenic geomorphic features to detect and analyse human societal activities, including symbolic formations, agricultural systems, settlement patterns and trade networks. This paper provides a general framework aimed at integrating geophysical and archaeological approaches to observing, identifying and interpreting the full range of anthropogenic geomorphic features based on their structure and functioning, both individually and as components of landscape-scale management strategies by different societies, or "sociocultural fingerprints". We then couple this framework with new algorithms developed to detect anthropogenic geomorphic features using precisely detailed three-dimensional reconstructions of landscape surface structure derived from LiDAR and computer vision photogrammetry. Human societies are now transforming the geomorphology of landscapes at increasing rates and scales across the globe. To understand the causes and consequences of these transformations and contribute to building sustainable futures, the science of physical geography must advance towards empirical and theoretical frameworks that integrate the natural and sociocultural forces that are now the main shapers of Earth's surface processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Burial, erosion, and transformation of archaeological landscapes.
- Author
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Hilton, Michael, Walter, Richard, Greig, Karen, and Konlechner, Teresa
- Subjects
- *
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *EROSION , *COASTAL processes (Physical geology) , *SAND dunes , *AMMOPHILA (Plants) , *SHORELINES - Abstract
A high proportion of archaeological sites are located on the world’s shorelines and recent research has documented the vulnerability of these sites to coastal processes and climate change. However, archaeological landscapes on many temperate coasts have already been degraded as a result of changes in dune dynamics related to changes in dune vegetation. These changes have produced marked spatial and temporal variations in patterns of burial and erosion in transgressive dune systems. This paper examines the modification and conservation of archaeological landscapes from a biogeomorphic perspective, using the example of marram grass (Ammophila arenaria) invasion of dune systems in southern New Zealand. The impact of marram grass on dune system dynamics and the underlying archaeological landscape are complex. Full invasion may result in the general burial and protection of these landscapes, but the risk of degradation of sites is high during the invasion process. In southern New Zealand, marram invasion has resulted in the formation of stable foredunes, often associated with coastal progradation. Archaeological sites located close to the shoreline can be subject to either burial or erosion, or both, as marram grass establishes in the foredune zone. The spatial relationship between cultural sites and the shoreline may be lost as the coast progrades. The impact of marram invasion can extend throughout the hinterland dune system as a result of (i) dune mobility triggered by marram grass invasion and (ii) the development of a negative sand budget, which prevents or reduces beach-foredune-dune system sand exchange. The risk of degradation of the archaeological landscape can be significantly heighted by marram invasion, which can have profound implications for the preservation and interpretation of archaeological sites and materials. Paradoxically, dune system restoration may lead to the re-exposure of these sites, but the principal outcome of dune system restoration is expected to be a decline erosion (manifest as in deflation surfaces) and reburial of the archaeological landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Changes in settlement patterns on the River Rena, southeast Norway: A response to Holocene climate change?
- Author
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Balbo, Andrea L., Persson, Per, and Roberts, Stephen J.
- Subjects
LAND settlement patterns ,RIVERS ,ICE sheets ,SEDIMENTOLOGY ,HUMAN settlements ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
The melting of the Scandinavian Ice-Sheet in the early Holocene allowed humans to populate the northernmost parts of Europe. Recent excavations of archaeological sites on the riverbank, floodplain and kame terraces of the River Rena, southeast Norway have defined periods of human occupation in riverside environments, which became ice-free during the last deglaciation. In this paper, we extend the scope of previous archaeological work by examining the sedimentology and chronology of five riverside sedimentary sequences along the River Rena. Our aims were to reconstruct the Holocene evolution of part of the river, and determine whether changes in Holocene settlement patterns might be linked to changes in river evolution and/or climate. Results show: (1) widespread draining of the kame terraces of the River Rena occurred shortly before the first consistent human settlement in the area began c. 8 ka BP; (2) human settlement was maintained until the present day, except during a period of previously undocumented abandonment between c. 4 and 3 ka BP, associated with a sustained period of high river discharge. We link the establishment of first undisputable settlement to reduced water levels as glaciers retreated upstream during a 'warmer' phase of the early Holocene, shortly after the 8.2 ka climatic downturn event. The most recent abandonment of the riverbank settlements 4-3 ka BP occurred during the last phase of glacier advance in the River Rena region, which has been linked to the Europe-wide late- Holocene Thermal Decline (Neoglacial) downturn in climate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Forest—savanna dynamics in the coastal lowland of southern Mozambique since c. AD 1400.
- Author
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Ekblom, Anneli
- Subjects
DROUGHTS ,WEATHER ,NATURAL disasters ,RAINFALL ,CLIMATE change ,CLIMATOLOGY ,AGRICULTURAL climatology ,VEGETATION & climate - Abstract
In the coastal lowlands of Mozambique, an expansion of savannas at the cost of forests has been attributed to anthropogenic influence. There are few investigations that have studied vegetation dynamics over the long term. Pollen analysis from two sedimentary cores in the Chibuene area, 7 km south of Vilanculos presented in this paper show that the coastal area 1600 years ago consisted of a mosaic of forests, Miombo woodlands and grasslands. The data also show that the area supported extensive forests in the past until AD 1400-1600 when the forests declined dramatically. Changing settlement patterns, as suggested from archaeological excavations, cannot be correlated with the forest decline and the charcoal abundance, in the sedimentary cores does not suggest an intensification of farming. Instead the decline of forests appears to be temporally correlated with a prolonged period of repeated dry spells associated with the 'Little Ice Age', which caused a shift in vegetation whereby typical forest species as Trema, Celtis and Moraceae were outcompeted on account of the droughts. This study challenges rooted assumptions about the cause of decline of forests in the coastal region. It also suggests that the forest fragments present on the Mozambique coast today are naturally subject to threat from climatic stress and as such are highly sensitive areas to future climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Implications of a 14 200 year contiguous fire record for understanding human-climate relationships at Goochs Swamp, New South Wales, Australia.
- Author
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Black, M. P., Mooney, S. D., and Attenbrow, V.
- Subjects
EFFECT of human beings on climate change ,GLOBAL temperature changes ,FOREST fires ,LAND use ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,HISTORIC sites ,ABORIGINAL Australians - Abstract
This paper interprets macroscopic charcoal (>250 μm), humification and loss-on-ignition over the last ∼14 200 cal. BP from Goochs Swamp, located to the west of Sydney in the Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area. This study aimed to investigate relationships between humans, climate and fire through time, primarily by comparison of these palaeoenvironmental indices with archaeological evidence from the region. Climatic forcing can explain all periods of change in the history of fire at Goochs Swamp: fire activity was variable during the Lateglacial-Holocene transition, low during the relatively stable climate of the early Holocene, and high but variable after the onset of modern El Niño from the mid Holocene. Although the dominant control on fire in this environment during the Holocene appears to be climate, fluctuations in the late Holocene may reflect anthropogenic fire or human responses to climate change. The archaeological record of the Blue Mountains and other parts of the Sydney Basin illustrates that Aboriginal people altered subsistence, resource and land-use patterns in the late Holocene. We propose that these cultural measures were adopted to overcome new risks as the frequency of ENSO events increased, and the natural fire regime and resource reliability changed. These strategies perhaps included a more systematic use of fire. The most parsimonious interpretation of the evidence for changes in fire activity at Goochs Swamp in the light of nearby archaeological evidence is that Aboriginal people used fire within a changing climatic framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Rethinking cultural chronologies and past landscape engagement in the Kopi region, Gulf Province, Papua New Guinea.
- Author
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David, Bruno
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,ANTIQUITIES ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,RADIOCARBON dating ,LAND use -- History ,SOCIAL change ,HISTORY of Papua New Guinea - Abstract
Archaeological models of regional occupation for culture change in and the arrival of trade goods into, the Gulf Province of Papua New Guinea have largely relied on pioneering research undertaken in the 1970s, prior to the advent of AMS radiocarbon dating and from a time when excavation methods were relatively coarse-grained. These early chronologies were based on bulk radiocarbon samples potentially incorporating materials from multiple periods of occupation, and freshwater shells 'contaminated' by old carbon from regional Miocene limestones necessitating the application of correction factors of uncertain local applicability. This paper revises chronological aspects of pre-European contact history for the mid-Kikori River region of the Gulf Province. It presents a suite of 100 new AMS radiocarbon dates on individual pieces of charcoal, human teeth and a fish bone from 16 sites, in order to re-assess previous chronologies and understandings of the region's history, and to provide a new foundation for future modelling of site and regional land use. Past settlement systems in this region were guided by processes of social interaction and thus need to be interrogated through notions of social landscape in historical perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. What happened at 1500-1000 cal. BP in Central Australia? Timing, impact and archaeological signatures.
- Author
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Smith, M. A. and Ross, J.
- Subjects
POPULATION history ,PREHISTORIC antiquities ,PREHISTORIC peoples ,POPULATION geography ,POPULATION density ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,DEMOGRAPHIC change ,ARID regions - Abstract
This paper reviews the late Holocene archaeology of Central Australia. The last 1500 years saw significant changes in the archaeological record in this part of the Australian arid zone, with shifts in settlement pattern, site histories, resource use, tool inventories and rock art. Much of the evidence points to regional population growth, beginning 1500-1000 cal. BP and coinciding with expansion of summer-rainfall grassland and more frequent palaeoflood events. Hunter-gatherer groups appear to have increased their use of marginal or outlying areas as these became seasonally accessible. Responses to the demographic changes, especially in the better-watered ranges, include more extended occupation of existing sites, more processing of acacia and grass seeds, and an increase in territoriality reflected in the greater differentiation of rock art complexes after 1500 cal. BP. The archaeological changes are not scaled commensurately with the modest environmental shifts at this time, indicating that human-environment interactions were not linear. A human-environment threshold may have been breached 1500-1000 years ago, with existing socio-economic or historical factors acting to amplify the effects of small environmental changes. However, it remains difficult to fully characterize the nature of these human-environment interactions, despite the fine-grained archaeological record now available. An unresolved problem for this emerging picture of climatic amelioration and population growth is that Aboriginal settlement in Central Australia was expanding at a time when ENSO-driven variability appears to have been at its highest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Pre-industrial human and environment interactions in northern Peru during the late Holocene.
- Author
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Dillehay, Tom, Kolata, Alan L., and Pino Q., Mario
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,GEOLOGY ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,URBANIZATION ,SOCIAL sciences ,VALLEYS - Abstract
The result of long-term environmental and human interaction is a variety of potential human responses to major natural crises: population aggregation or dispersal, changes in economic strategies and landuse patterns, restructuring of social organization, increase in the incidence of conflict and warfare, and, in some instances, urban abandonment and cultural collapse. In the context of pre-industrial societies, two social processes with the greatest potential impact on the environment and on changing human-environmental interaction are urbanization and the development of diversified, regional-scale production systems such as intensive agriculture, pastoralism and exploitation of maritime resources. This paper employs archaeological and geological data from the Jequetepeque and Zana valleys on the north coast desert of Peru to study: (1) the specific responses of Moche, Chimu and Inca societies (c. AD 250-1553) to major episodes of drought, El Nin~o flooding, and desertification; (2) the social processes of urban-rural relations and economic diversification; and (3) how these processes interacted within the dynamic arid north coast. Our research focuses on changing palaeoenvironmental regimes, agricultural infrastructures and domestic occupations to explore the complex interplay of cultural and natural forces that shaped the variable human responses and the history of urban-rural systems. Understanding the problem of how pre-industrial systems were sustained or failed in the context of interrelated social and environmental crises is an interdisciplinary objective, one that requires the integration of analytical techniques and theoretical frameworks of both the natural and social sciences as delineated in this study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Bayesian tools for tephrochronology.
- Author
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Buck, Caitlin E., Higham, Thomas F.G., and Lowe, David J.
- Subjects
TEPHROCHRONOLOGY ,RADIOCARBON dating ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,BIO-bibliography - Abstract
It is suggested that Bayesian statistical methods for radiocarbon data interpretation, already widely used in archaeology, also have potential to improve the dating of tephra layers and hence enhance their use for tephrochronology. By re-analysing data from a recently published paper in which the authors sought to identify the calendar date of the eruption of fourteenth-century AD Kaharoa Tephra, a key marker in New Zealand prehistory, it is shown that Bayesian methods can be used to draw together a coherent collection of radiocarbon data, undertake formal outlier detection, and include prior information. Regardless of the calibration curve adopted, the distribution of likely dates for the Kaharoa eruption is multimodal. By including prior information from wiggle-matched dendrochronology, the uncertainty on the estimate of the calendar date is reduced from a range of about 100 years to about 25 years (i.e., 648–623 cal. BP, with modes at 638 and 632 cal. BP). Using sensitivity analysis, however, it is shown that such estimates are affected by the quality and nature of the prior information available. As a result, we urge tephrochronologists to seek fastidiously both high-quality radiocarbon data and reliable stratigraphic sequences that might inform future geochronological model building. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Agricultural origins: the evidence of modern and ancient DNA.
- Author
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Jones, M. and Brown, T.
- Subjects
AGRICULTURE ,ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
The appearance of agriculture is one of the most striking features of Holocene human history, a feature that has long been studied in an interdisciplinary fashion, bringing archaeology together with plant and animal genetics. This paper reviews new developments in that study, consequent upon recent advances in DNA science. Among these advances is the possibility of complementing modern DNA data with fragmentary evidence of ancient DNA. Following a short account of the historical foundations of this research, studies of plant and animal domesticates based upon variations in protein, modern DNA and ancient DNA are reviewed in turn. The results of these studies are considered against a background of two contrasting models of how agriculture originated and spread, characterized by Blumler (1992) as ‘stimulus-diffusion’ and ‘independent invention’. We argue that existing evidence from DNA supports neither model in its extreme form, favouring instead an intermediate model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Economics and Urdeuteronomium : A response to Kåre Berge, Diana Edelman, Philippe Guillaume, and Benedetta Rossi.
- Author
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Richter, Sandra Lynn
- Subjects
LINGUISTICS ,HISTORIOGRAPHIC terminology ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,ECONOMICS ,NUMISMATICS - Abstract
Although grateful that Berge, Edelman, Guillaume, and Rossi have engaged my essay, 'The Question of Provenance and the Economics of Deuteronomy', their critique, which speaks against my conclusions, fails to account for essential archaeological, ethnographic, and linguistic data illuminating the economic profile of the Book of Deuteronomy. The most significant lacuna is their failure to address the economic realities of the Persian period. That data, and more, is summarized here. The present essay moves past literary and historiographic presuppositions regarding the provenance of Urdeuteronomium in order to engage the economic and numismatic realia that is recoverable from Israel's world and offer an important avenue forward in deuteronomic researcḥ [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Monsoons, rice production, and urban growth: The microscale management of 'too much' water.
- Author
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Smith, Monica L. and Mohanty, Rabindra Kumar
- Subjects
- *
RICE farming , *MONSOONS , *URBAN growth , *CITY dwellers , *AGRICULTURAL productivity , *EFFECT of floods on plants - Abstract
In discussions of human-environmental dynamics and climate change, treatments of water usually focus on the problem of drought. Monsoon environments constitute a different set of parameters for landscape interactions because of seasonal episodes of water abundance. In this paper, we evaluate the microscale management of routine and anticipated high-water events for the ancient Indian subcontinent, where people used the monsoon cycle to engage in rice farming that in turn supported the growth of cities. Rice production would have encompassed two fluctuating inputs: rural labor, which may have become scarce when villagers left farmlands to become city dwellers; and water, the quantity of which varies dramatically on both a seasonal basis because of the monsoon and on an occasional basis because of tropical cyclones. The abundance of water (even with its risks of overabundance) encompassed numerous logistical challenges but also permitted high productivity within short distances of urban centers. The case study of the ancient city of Sisupalgarh in eastern India illustrates that high levels of productivity per land area enabled city residents to engage in short-distance economies for food production, while maintaining regional contacts through durable-goods trade to mitigate occasional episodes of crop failure in times of major flooding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Are circumpolar hunter-gatherers visible in the palaeoenvironmental record? Pollen-analytical evidence from Nunalleq, southwestern Alaska.
- Author
-
Ledger, Paul M.
- Subjects
- *
PALEOENVIRONMENTAL studies , *PALYNOLOGY , *PALEOECOLOGY , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *HIGH resolution imaging - Abstract
Identifying evidence for hunter-gatherers in the palaeoenvironmental record is far from simple. Despite decades of research, few studies have demonstrated unambiguous palynological evidence of hunter-gatherers. This paper presents the results of high-resolution palaeoecological analyses of a peat sequence located within the vicinity of the pre-historic Yup’ik village of Nunalleq in southwestern Alaska. The aim of this research was to examine whether there are any discernible palaeoenvironmental impacts associated with the 15th–17th century occupation of the site. Presuming an ephemeral character to any palaeoecological signal, this study selected a sampling location approximately 30 m east of the limit of archaeological remains. Pollen, non-pollen palynomorphs and microscopic charcoal analysis were then used to generate a highly resolved (contiguous 1 cm) environmental history for the site. The results are striking and indicate that the activities of prehistoric Yup’ik hunter-gatherers at Nunalleq did leave a clear material trace in the palaeoenvironmental record. Through the application of high-resolution Pb210 and C14 dating and Bayesian modelling, these impacts were found to be concurrent with the occupation of the archaeological site. These findings suggest that not only can circumpolar hunter-gatherers leave a material palaeoenvironmental trace but that these traces may be used to accurately date such site activity in lieu of excavation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Micromorphological evidence of soil deterioration since the mid-Holocene at archaeological sites in Brittany, France.
- Author
-
Gebhardt, Anne
- Abstract
This paper presents data on the evolution of agricultural landscapes in Brittany from the end of the Atlantic chronozone to the Mediaeval period (450 BC-AD 1600), using soil micromorphology in a multidisciplinary palaeoenvironmental context. Buried soils and unburied sediments associated with archaeological structures in Brittany were examined. The study of well dated archaeological buried soils gives new information on the way the landscape of Brittany was affected by human impact, which has disturbed the Atlantic soil balance since the start of the Neolithic and has been a major factor in soil acidification in Brittany. Deforestation of primary woodland occurred however, over a long period. The analysis of down-slope sediment accumulation shows that colluviation of loam-rich soils was stimulated by deforestation and agriculture. Micromorphological study of archaeological ditches shows that some microscopical features are difficult to interpret in unburied conditions, especially in modern cultivated contexts, but that this can be done after comparison with experimentally reconstructed (or similar traditional) structures. Such results help our understanding of the history of bocage (land enclosure). [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. A Small Company of Actors.
- Author
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Boast, Robin
- Abstract
The concept of style has been central to material culture studies for the past 50 years. During this time, the main problem of style has been one of defi nition. Whether cultural evolutionist, processualist or constructivist, the problem of 'what is style' has remained problematic. This paper attempts to go beyond the quest for a definition of style to question the foundations of the categorization of the world into style and utility, and, through the work of others, challenge the dualist doctrine that constitutes our view of the material world and our relation to it. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Long-term trends in settlement persistence in Southwest Asia: Implications for sustainable urbanism, past, present and future.
- Author
-
Lawrence, Dan, de Gruchy, Michelle W, Hinojosa-Baliño, Israel, and Al-Hamdani, Abdulameer
- Abstract
Southwest Asia saw the emergence of large settlements in the Early Holocene, and the world’s first urban communities around 6000 years ago, with cities a feature of the region ever since. These developed in diverse environmental settings, including the dry-farming plains of Northern Mesopotamia, the irrigated alluvium of Southern Mesopotamia and the more variegated landscapes of the Levant. In this paper we use a dataset of several hundred sites dating from the earliest large sites around 12,000 years ago to the Classical period (2000 BP), to examine trends in settlement sustainability through time. We use persistence of occupation as a proxy for sustainability and compare settlement trajectories in different land use zones. Comparing cities and settlements at these spatial and temporal scales allows us to address a key question in the New Urban Agendas framework: how urban development can best be supported by sustainable use of land. We find that the highest levels of persistence were not uniformly associated with high agricultural productivity regions, and some of the longest-lived settlements are located in marginal environments, likely at critical points in transport networks. We also find that persistence is enhanced in landscapes which do not require large-scale capital investment or specific forms of economic and social organisation to maintain high levels of agricultural productivity, and that sustainability is inversely correlated with social complexity. Our results show that the millennial timescales available through archaeology can enable us to identify the political, social and ecological conditions required for large centres to persist through time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Orbital, ice-sheet, and possible solar forcing of Holocene lake-level fluctuations in west-central Europe: A reply to Magny.
- Author
-
Bleicher, Niels K
- Subjects
ICE sheets ,RADIATIVE forcing ,SOLAR activity ,HOLOCENE Epoch ,LAKE sediments - Abstract
In his comment on Bleicher (2013) Magny presents a revised version of his score method and reaffirms that it can prove a possible influence of solar activity on Central European lake levels. He also stresses the diagnostic value of archaeological lake site settlements. This paper points at methodological problems that are not yet resolved in the revised version. Since there is great consensus that not only is the the Sun a primary forcing factor in the climate’s system, but also that its effect cannot be expected to be linear for all of the Holocene, the use of the score record is questioned. The proposed relation between archaeological lake site settlements and solar activity is shown to be doubtful. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Contemporary archaeology in conflict zones: The materiality of violence and the transformation of the urban space in Temuco, Chile during the social outburst.
- Author
-
Lindskoug, Henrik B. and Martínez, Wladimir
- Subjects
GRAFFITI ,URBAN violence ,PUBLIC spaces ,HUMAN rights organizations ,SOCIAL movements ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL surveying ,ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
We have, during the Latin American spring, studied the material traces of state oppression and social movements in Temuco, Chile, and the transformation of the urban landscape with archaeological surveys. Our results demonstrate alterations in the urban landscape related to both police presence and protesters. Large amounts of teargas-projectiles and rubber bullets indicate strong police presence and repression of different social movements. We have also identified protection and resistance modes in the form of shields, paint bombs, and protective masks, often associated with graffiti's, barricades, and other alterations of the public space. Material vestiges combined with interviews have shown how state institutions have tried to cover up the traces of violence. We argue that archaeology can play a central role in this process and in recording the materiality of these events with the aim to hand over the information to human right associations to prevent state oppression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. In defense of materiality: Attending to the sensori-social life of things.
- Author
-
Howes, David
- Subjects
ANTHROPOLOGY ,EIGHTEENTH century ,NINETEENTH century ,ENVIRONMENTAL psychology ,ETHNOHISTORY ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,PLEASURE - Abstract
This article presents a defense of the concept of materiality in the face of Tim Ingold's critique of the concept as part of his "efforts to restore anthropology to life" in Being Alive and elsewhere. While acknowledging the forcefulness of Ingold's stress on the "liveliness" of materials, and doctrine of perception "as action" (not representation), it critiques the way he neuters the perceiving subject, abstracts the senses, disregards the sensuous pleasures of making, and elides the sensori-social life of things. Three case studies are presented by way of illustration: the sensorial archaeology of perception, the "exuberant materiality" of the Byzantine bas-relief metal icon, and the tactility of "ladies' craftwork" in the eighteenth and nineteenth century. In place of Ingold's ideal-typical figures – the rootless wayfarer, the skilled craftsman – this article brings out the situatedness of the human subject within a particular tradition, or sensory and social regime, and how this mediates their construction and perception of things and other persons. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Factors influencing length of stay of cultural tourists.
- Author
-
BRIDA, JUAN GABRIEL, MELEDDU, MARTA, and PULINA, MANUELA
- Subjects
CULTURE & tourism ,HERITAGE tourism ,TOURIST attractions ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,GENERALIZATION - Abstract
This paper examines the length of stay of cultural tourists in a mountain destination in the northeast of Italy. A microeconomic perspective of cultural tourism is provided, in which the main point of interest is to analyse the attitudes of visitors regarding culture and their overall vacation. To this end, visitors' behaviour is examined through survey data obtained at the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology in Bolzano, Italy. A zero-truncated negative binomial model is empirically estimated, unlike in other studies, as a generalization of a Poisson distribution. The analysis identifies the main determinants that influence the length of stay of cultural tourists: nationality, age, employment, income, costs associated with the journey - all have an impact on the length of stay. Specifically, variations in these factors correspond to variations in the duration of the vacation. The duration is also positively affected by the presence of the icemen Ötzi in the museum and of other cultural attractions. The findings provide an essential tool for managing heritage resources and planning future tourism developments around the Ötzi museum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A view from the past to the future: Concluding remarks on the ‘The Anthropocene in the Longue Durée’.
- Author
-
Crumley, Carole, Laparidou, Sofia, Ramsey, Monica, and Rosen, Arlene M.
- Subjects
ANTHROPOCENE Epoch ,ENVIRONMENTAL history ,LONGUE duree (Historiography) ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
The Special Issue provides a deep-time interdisciplinary perspective on the Anthropocene and signals the importance of the Anthropocene concept in past, present, and future human–environmental relationships. This concluding article recognizes that various approaches – scientific, postmodern, catastrophist, and ecomarxist – can contribute to understanding the Anthropocene as a process and that contributions have been made by several disciplines, including Anthropology, Archaeology, Geography, History, and Politics. The critical importance of weaving together social science perspectives with those of the natural sciences is emphasized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Is the concept of human impacts past its use-by date?
- Author
-
Head, Lesley
- Subjects
PREHISTORIC hearths ,PREHISTORIC peoples ,CLIMATE change ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,PALEOECOLOGY ,BIOTIC communities ,ECOLOGY ,ANTHROPOLOGISTS - Abstract
Scientific research now shows that humans are pervasive in earth ecosystems, and have been so for many thousands of years. So it may seem strange to argue against a concept that has been so hard won and is now empirically incontrovertible. What is starting to seem stranger is that, to paraphrase anthropologist Tim Ingold, the best way we have to describe our role in the world is to take ourselves out of it. As human influence on the Earth and its processes increases, we face the profound paradox that most of our intellectual weapons in the environmental area—from prehistoric fire debates to projections of climate change—have maintained a separation of humans and nature. This is an argument based not on semantics but on false separations that are adversely affecting the quality of our research and practice, including the ways we attempt to integrate archaeology and palaeoecology. While 'human impacts' may be applicable to a subset of human activities, it is neither conceptually nor empirically strong enough for the detailed networks of human and non-human others now evident. We need to articulate a broader concept of agency, both human and otherwise, and to develop explanations that focus on associations and relationships rather than separations and essentialisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Existing in Discrete States: On the Techno-Aesthetics of Algorithmic Being-in-Time.
- Author
-
Ernst, Wolfgang
- Subjects
ALGORITHMS ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,CHRONOLOGY ,TURING machines ,INTELLECT - Abstract
Against a remarkable hardware oblivion in discussions of algorithmic intelligence, this article insists that algorithmic thought, or abstract computation, cannot be separated from its technological implementation. It requires a material medium for an abstract mechanism to become a procedural event. Temporality is both the condition and the limiting (and irritating) factor in the computational function. 'Radical' media archaeology is proposed as a method for such an analysis, and the neologism of techno lógos to describe some aspects of algorithmic reason which only unfold in the moment of its techno-processual coming-into-being. Some core operations, such as the time-discrete rhythm of actual computing algorithms, are discussed, where the 'tempoReal' flashes up in computing. In a wider sense, the time-discreteness of digital computing is related to an aesthetics of existence which acknowledges the machine element within human reasoning itself, while at the same time re-actualizing previous cultural techniques of non-narrative chronology. Turing the 'man' himself, in the sense of the Turing machine, can be addressed 'itself', in its archival sense as a sequence of expressions by symbols. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. How Empty Was the Tomb?
- Author
-
Goodacre, Mark
- Abstract
Although the term 'empty tomb' is endemic in contemporary literature, it is never used in the earliest Christian materials. The term makes little sense in the light of first-century Jerusalem tombs, which always housed multiple people. One absent body would not leave the tomb empty. The gospel narratives presuppose a large, elite tomb, with multiple loculi, and a heavy rolling stone to allow repeated access for multiple burials. The gospels therefore give precise directions about where Jesus' body lay in this large tomb. Apologetic anxiety leads to the characterization of the tomb as 'new' (Matthew and John), 'in which no one had been laid' (Luke and John), but it is possible that the appearance of Mark's young man 'on the right' is significant. The anachronistic question 'Was the tomb empty?' should be replaced by the accurate question, 'How empty was the tomb?' [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Problems associated with correlating calibrated radiocarbon-dated pollen diagrams with historical events.
- Author
-
Dumayne, Lisa, Stoneman, Rob, Barber, Keith, and Harkness, Doug
- Abstract
Problems of reconciling events registered in radiocarbon-dated pollen diagrams with calendar- dated archaeological events have been encountered when interpreting pollen diagrams constructed from a number of mire sites in the Hadrianic-Antonine frontier zone of Roman Britain. Only at Fozy Moss, Northumbria, is it possible to relate a substantial clearance in the radiocarbon-dated pollen diagram to a particular event in the calendar-dated archaeological record; in this case the Roman occupation of northern Britain and the building of Hadrian's Wall. The limitations encountered with such an approach are highlighted - too few dates and lack of precision as a result of sample size and calibration - and their implications discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Reflections in shadow: Excavating the personal archives of Paul Jacobsthal and EM Jope.
- Author
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Hitchcock, Matthew William
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL archives ,HISTORY of archives ,ARCHIVES ,HISTORICAL source material ,IRON Age ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL assemblages ,INFORMATION resources - Abstract
The formation of archives has been a key facet of the archaeological discipline since its inception, critical in the production of knowledge from the destructive excavation that occurs in the field. The ongoing 'archival shift' within the humanities from archives as mere sources of secondary information to primary topics of research has presented new potential for the study of historic archaeological archives. This article explores the personal archives of two great scholars of Iron Age Celtic art, Paul Jacobsthal and EM Jope, held at the Institute of Archaeology, University of Oxford. Shedding new light on their engagement and interaction with the objects that they studied, the author explores the archive's power to illuminate the ways in which the scholars' methods, experiences and encounters shaped the knowledge that they produced about the past. Through presenting the archives as both primary sources of historical information and vibrant material entities, worthy of 'excavation' in their own right, the article advocates an assemblage-based archaeological approach to archival engagement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Creativity of Digital (Audiovisual) Archives: A Dialogue Between Media Archaeology and Cultural Semiotics.
- Author
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Ibrus, Indrek and Ojamaa, Maarja
- Subjects
DIGITAL libraries ,VIDEO archives ,SEMANTIC Web ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,FILM archives - Abstract
Much writing on, first, analogue and, later, digital archives has focused on related power-dynamics and the structuring effects of archives and their technologies on discursive freedom and cultural dynamics. In recent years, however, work within the media archaeology domain, especially by Wolfgang Ernst, has addressed how the specific materialities of digital archives, and the nature of their algorithms and particular functions, could be seen to facilitate dynamics in cultures. This article sets this work in dialogue with the cultural semiotics of Juri Lotman, whose late work focused on how communicative processes between and within different subsystems of culture facilitate their dynamic change and the production of new forms and cultural systems. The article suggests further interdisciplinary dialogue between media archaeology and cultural semiotics in order to understand the role of archives in facilitating communicative processes and interlinking in culture and the emergence of novelties – that is, for understanding the 'creativity' of archives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. From mud to the museum: Metadata challenges in archaeology.
- Author
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Henninger, Maureen
- Subjects
METADATA ,ANTIQUITIES ,EXCAVATION ,CULTURAL property ,DOCUMENTARY evidence - Abstract
An archaeological site is a palimpsest in which the evidence of the depositional episodes is destroyed through the excavation processes; all that remains are the artefacts and their documentary evidence manifested in registers, datasets, dig diaries and reports. While the reports may represent the end product of a specific excavation, the archaeological record tells a story; it is interpretative and dynamic, with later excavations adding new knowledge and narratives. Museums preserve the artefacts but unless the documentary evidence is preserved in standard formats, it cannot be easily re-used by the archaeology community to create that knowledge; nor can museums provide the narratives for the general public whose cultural heritage it is. This article presents a case study from the Ness of Brodgar excavations that examines possibilities for reconciling one part of the data of an archaeological dig, the small finds register (SFR) and its sparse amount of descriptive metadata, with the potentiality of data re-use and with the requirements of a museum that may have custody of the artefacts. It maps and enriches messy domain-specific ontologies to standard archaeological and cultural heritage ontologies and taxonomies using simple natural language processing, linked open data and the museum CIDOC conceptual reference model (CRM). This research, in examining the application of ontology mapping tools, explores common practices and processes that are useful in any discipline within the cultural heritage domain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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