Global Change Threats to the Archaeological and Paleoecological Record
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
Archaeological sites with good organic preservation are increasingly recognized both as sources of data on past human behavior and cultural organization, and as valuable resources for paleoenvironmental reconstruction, with potential similar to other paleoenvironmental proxy records. They hold valuable information needed to place human ecodynamics in the broad spatial and temporal perspective essential to developing a meaningful and actionable understanding of socionatural systems, often without the ambiguities of correlating between archaeological deposits and distant natural proxies.
Yet, just as new methods increase our ability to retrieve and study this information, global climate change poses a dire threat, both to the wealth of organic data in such sites, and to many of the sites themselves. Global change-related threats include: increased coastal erosion (due to sea level rise, increases in number and/or strength of storms, and diminished sea ice in Polar regions), increased riverine erosion (due to increases in precipitation amount or intensity and increases in glacial melting), drying of waterlogged sites and bogs (due to hydrological changes), changes in land use (due to changes in agriculture or displacement of populations). In high-latitude areas the thawing of permafrost is a major and imminent threat to the archaeological and paleoecological record.
Other Keywords
Climate Change •
Coastal Erosion •
Monitoring •
Preservation •
Archaeology •
Public Archaeology •
Commercial Fishing •
Environmental Archaeology •
Cultural Heritage •
Heritage Management
Geographic Keywords
Europe •
Arctic •
North America - Southwest •
North America - NW Coast/Alaska
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-8 of 8)
- Documents (8)
- Climate change and the preservation of archaeological sites in Greenland (2016)
- Climate Change Challenges at Bandelier National Monument: Adapting Conservation and Monitoring Responses for Cultural Sites in the Desert Southwest (2016)
- GIS Predictive Modeling to Identify Archeological Vulnerability to Climate Change Along the Coasts of Western Arctic National Parklands in Alaska (2016)
- The potential of coastally eroding palaeoenvironmental deposits and middens as climatic and cultural data reservoirs (2016)
- Report from the Ragged Edge: Vanishing Heritage on Alaska’s North Slope (2016)
- Sandbagging the Past: Rescue Excavations at a Medieval Icelandic Fishing Station (2016)
- Scotland’s Coastal Heritage at Risk: prioritizing action and connecting research and citizen science at sites threatened by the sea (2016)
- Understanding damage due to sea level rise in Orkney: the results of recent work (2016)