358 results on '"human‐environment interactions"'
Search Results
2. Human activities, early farming and natural environment in the north-western Kanto Plain (Central Japan) during the Final Jomon–Early Kofun period (990 cal BCE–330 cal CE) inferred from palynological and archaeobotanical records
- Author
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Leipe, Christian, Kobe, Franziska, Schubert, Anna, Endo, Eiko, Yasui, Maya, Koshitsuka, Hirotaka, Ono, Michiko, Tarasov, Pavel E., and Wagner, Mayke
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Towards sustainable urban communities: Investigating the associations between community parks and place attachment in master-planned estates in Sydney
- Author
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Yang, Chunyan, Shi, Song, and Runeson, Goran
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Stable isotope analysis of faunal remains from Bronze Age Kaymakçı, Western Anatolia.
- Author
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Irvine, Benjamin, Luke, Christina, Çakırlar, Canan, Kaner, Tunç, Özbal, Rana, Fındıklar, Şengül, and Roosevelt, Christopher H
- Subjects
- *
HOME range (Animal geography) , *STABLE isotope analysis , *ANIMAL culture , *EVIDENCE gaps , *ISOTOPIC analysis - Abstract
This paper presents the results of stable carbon (δ 13C) and nitrogen (δ 15N) isotopic analysis of bulk bone collagen from faunal remains from the Bronze Age site of Kaymakçı in western Anatolia. We use the isotopic values in conjunction with zooarchaeological data and contextual archaeological information to examine human-environment interactions; in particular, animal management and husbandry. Middle and Late Bronze Age agricultural systems in western and central Anatolia remain poorly understood, and this research aims to contribute to rectifying this research gap. We obtained stable isotopic values from both wild and domestic species, including deer, hare, birds, catfish, dogs, pigs, caprids and cattle. The δ 13C values range from −22.0‰ to −16.9‰ and the δ 15N values range from 2.3‰ to 10.3‰. For cattle, the δ 13C values suggest that some specimens were subject to different management strategies, likely related to feeding or herding patterns or even the movement of animals in and around the region through some exchange mechanism. There appears to be no fixed location or strategy for the management of caprids and, furthermore, there is evidence to suggest that the herding/management areas of some caprids overlapped with those of wild animals such as deer and hare. Variation in δ 15N values for pigs may indicate that whilst some animals in the sampled assemblage were free-roaming, others were penned. For the pigs and some other herbivorous domesticated species variation in δ 15N values may also point to the exploitation of the wetland areas around Lake Marmara. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The Khonkho tephra: A large-magnitude volcanic eruption coincided with the rise of Tiwanaku in the Andes.
- Author
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Marsh, Erik J, Harpel, Christopher J, and Damby, David E
- Subjects
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VOLCANIC ash, tuff, etc. , *VOLCANOLOGY , *VOLCANIC eruptions , *WATERSHEDS , *SOCIAL interaction , *EXPLOSIVE volcanic eruptions - Abstract
We report a tephra deposit in the southern Lake Titicaca Basin, Bolivia, which was deposited by a major, previously unrecognized eruption sometime between AD 400 and 720. Archaeological data suggest these centuries were characterized by a substantial community migration to Tiwanaku, where social interaction networks gave birth to one of the Andes' first large complex societies. Here we provide an initial characterization of this tephra, based on samples from the archaeological site Khonkho Wankane. The same tephra is present at two other archaeological sites in the region. Given the great distance to the nearest active volcano, this tephra layer likely derives from a large-magnitude, Late-Holocene explosive eruption of a Central Andean volcano. We suggest that this major event be included in the human history of the region, given its inferred magnitude and wide dispersal area. Future research could confirm the Khonkho tephra at other sites, identify the source volcano, estimate its volume, and more precisely date the eruption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Archaeology, ethnography, and geosciences reveal central role of traditional lifeways in shaping Madagascar's dry forests.
- Author
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Davis, Dylan S, Tucker, Bram, Justome, Ricky, Chrisostome, Zafy Maharesy, Pierre, Briand Venance, Domic, Alejandra I, Phelps, Leanne N, Ibirogba, Abiola, Mangut, Chiamaka, Klehm, Carla E, and Douglass, Kristina
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change , *TROPICAL dry forests , *LAND settlement patterns , *ENVIRONMENTAL degradation , *EARTH sciences , *HUMAN settlements - Abstract
Many communities in southwestern Madagascar rely on a mix of foraging, fishing, farming, and herding, with cattle central to local cultures, rituals, and intergenerational wealth transfer. Today these livelihoods are critically threatened by the intensifying effects of climate change and biodiversity loss. Improved understanding of ancient community-environment dynamics can help identify pathways to livelihood sustainability. Multidisciplinary approaches have great potential to improve our understanding of human-environment interactions across spatio-temporal scales. We combine archaeological survey data, oral history interviews, and high-resolution multispectral PlanetScope imagery to explore 400 years of human-environment interaction in the Namonte Basin. Our analysis reveals that settlement and land-use led to significant changes in the region's ecology, both during periods of occupation and after settlement abandonment. Human activity over this period may have stabilized vegetative systems, whereby seasonal changes in vegetative health were reduced compared to surrounding locations. These ecological legacies may have buffered communities against unpredictable climate challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Exploratory modeling of social‐ecological systems.
- Author
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Eppinga, Maarten B., Reader, Martin O., and Santos, Maria J.
- Subjects
SYSTEMS theory ,SYSTEM dynamics ,SUSTAINABLE development ,DATA modeling - Abstract
Navigating social‐ecological systems toward sustainable trajectories is an important challenge of the Anthropocene. Models of social‐ecological systems can increase our understanding of how social and ecological subsystems interact, their response to environmental changes, and how their dynamics may be altered by management interventions. However, the level of representational detail required for models to describe a particular social‐ecological system with high fidelity (i.e., accurately quantifying system dynamics) may hamper both the interpretability of model results and our ability to identify key processes and feedbacks within the system. In contrast, stylized models describe simplified interactions between a small subset of social‐ecological system elements. Stylized models are a useful tool to identify potential consequences of specific key processes and feedbacks on system functioning. However, the relatively low level of representational detail in these models limits their ability to deliver concrete management options for a particular social‐ecological system. Here, we describe how an exploratory modeling approach can utilize the strengths of stylized models before the construction of social‐ecological system models with high fidelity and representational detail. This exploratory modeling approach is an iterative strategy, with the initial steps comprising the development of stylized models informed by empirical observations. We illustrate this with two examples of stylized modeling of isolated and connected social‐ecological systems. Through repeated confrontation of alternative models with empirical data, exploratory modeling provides useful stepping stones toward the development of models that describe social‐ecological systems in increasingly specific settings with increasing levels of representational detail. When these latter types of models reach a high level of fidelity, they could be used for scenario‐based analyses and participatory decision‐making processes. At this stage, the conceptual insights previously obtained during the exploratory modeling phase may aid in the interpretation and communication of the outcomes of scenario‐based analyses. Hence, exploratory modeling aims to create a synergy between the insights obtained from stylized models and system‐specific, high‐fidelity models in order to generate a deep understanding of the drivers of social‐ecological system dynamics, and how to leverage these drivers to initiate desired changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Exploring local and regional vegetation compositional changes during the Neolithic (5th–3rd millennium BC): A case study on the forager impact on vegetation in north-east Europe.
- Author
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Alenius, Teija Helena, Marquer, Laurent, and Nordqvist, Kerkko
- Subjects
- *
VEGETATION dynamics , *STONE Age , *LAND cover , *LIVING conditions , *POLLEN - Abstract
This research explores the vegetation compositional changes between the fifth and third millennium BC on the Karelian Isthmus (north-west Russia). Special emphasis is placed on studying the timing and magnitude of the impact of hunter-fisher-gatherers on the vegetation. First, we reconstruct the local vegetation around Lake Bolshoye Zavetnoye by using the Landscape Reconstruction Algorithm modelling. The application of different scenarios to the relevant source area of pollen is used to assess the local vegetation around Lake Bolshoye Zavetnoye (BZL) at specific distances from 500 to 3000 m. The regional vegetation reconstruction is assessed by using the REVEALS model. Second, we present new pollen and charcoal data from adjacent Lake Ikmenlampi (LI). Third, we calculate indices of vegetation change for BZL, LI and the region. We further explore the potential causes for these differences between the spatial scales and compare all these outcomes with local and regional archaeological data. The results show that foragers actively manipulated their environment. A shift towards more heliophilous conditions is shown by ca 4800 BC. Between 4000 and 3000 BC, an increase in archaeological material suggests intensive resource procurement and landscape management activities, particularly near settlements. Around the BZL site a local decrease in birch is observed from 4100 BC, coinciding with an increase in the rate of vegetation changes. Additionally, a decline in tree species (spruce, hazel, Alder) from 3500 to 3300 BC suggests human activities. The high fire frequency recorded between 4090 and 3150 BC further supports the presence of local human disturbances by the deliberate use of fire to create favourable living conditions. The results from the LI site go in the same direction with fluctuating abundances of spruce and the presence of pollen from Cannabis, Hordeum, Urtica and Plantago lanceolata from ca 4000 to 3600 BC, indicating the use of spruce-dominated forests and an early, incipient cultivation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Settlement, trade, and subsistence in coastal Mesoamerica: An introduction.
- Author
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Hedgepeth Balkin, Jessica D.
- Subjects
- *
COASTAL archaeology , *ACCESS to information , *INTERDISCIPLINARY research , *AQUATIC animals , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL geology - Abstract
Over the past several decades, a large corpus of studies has been published on the relationship between resource availability and settlement in coastal Mesoamerica, particularly regarding the prevalence of mixed subsistence systems early in the Formative Period (ca.1800–850 BC). Few recent comparative works, however, are available which draw together research on coastal human–environment interactions from several Mesoamerican regions. This article endeavors to contribute toward interregional comparisons by highlighting findings from case studies in this special section of The Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology. I explore broadly relevant themes, including geomorphic impacts on the archaeological record and the significance of coastal resources to coastal settlement, subsistence, and trade. While common patterns illuminate archaeological debates, it is important to identify the distinctive environmental characteristics of different regions which impact the visibility of archaeological data as well as the resources available to local populations. I emphasize the utility of conducting high-resolution interdisciplinary research to capture such ecological variability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Exploratory modeling of social‐ecological systems
- Author
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Maarten B. Eppinga, Martin O. Reader, and Maria J. Santos
- Subjects
dynamical models ,feedbacks ,human‐environment interactions ,model analysis ,sustainable development ,systems theory ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Navigating social‐ecological systems toward sustainable trajectories is an important challenge of the Anthropocene. Models of social‐ecological systems can increase our understanding of how social and ecological subsystems interact, their response to environmental changes, and how their dynamics may be altered by management interventions. However, the level of representational detail required for models to describe a particular social‐ecological system with high fidelity (i.e., accurately quantifying system dynamics) may hamper both the interpretability of model results and our ability to identify key processes and feedbacks within the system. In contrast, stylized models describe simplified interactions between a small subset of social‐ecological system elements. Stylized models are a useful tool to identify potential consequences of specific key processes and feedbacks on system functioning. However, the relatively low level of representational detail in these models limits their ability to deliver concrete management options for a particular social‐ecological system. Here, we describe how an exploratory modeling approach can utilize the strengths of stylized models before the construction of social‐ecological system models with high fidelity and representational detail. This exploratory modeling approach is an iterative strategy, with the initial steps comprising the development of stylized models informed by empirical observations. We illustrate this with two examples of stylized modeling of isolated and connected social‐ecological systems. Through repeated confrontation of alternative models with empirical data, exploratory modeling provides useful stepping stones toward the development of models that describe social‐ecological systems in increasingly specific settings with increasing levels of representational detail. When these latter types of models reach a high level of fidelity, they could be used for scenario‐based analyses and participatory decision‐making processes. At this stage, the conceptual insights previously obtained during the exploratory modeling phase may aid in the interpretation and communication of the outcomes of scenario‐based analyses. Hence, exploratory modeling aims to create a synergy between the insights obtained from stylized models and system‐specific, high‐fidelity models in order to generate a deep understanding of the drivers of social‐ecological system dynamics, and how to leverage these drivers to initiate desired changes.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Early Uses by Ancient Hawaiians, and Environmental, Geographical, and Ecological History, of Haleakalā Crater, East Maui
- Author
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Francisco Luis Pérez
- Subjects
animal introductions ,ecological altitude belts ,human–environment interactions ,human population development ,Kiha-a-Pi‘i-lani trail ,traditional agriculture systems ,Geography (General) ,G1-922 - Abstract
This research assesses the environmental uses of Haleakalā Crater, and adjoining east Maui areas, by native Hawaiians during recent centuries, and evaluates the modern utilization of this volcanic depression. The study methods examine, and focus on, numerous historical and modern accounts and reports. Three historical periods were identified as follows: (1). A phase, from the ~1400s until contact with foreigners in 1778, characterized by the development of settlements, population expansion, the intensification of traditional agriculture, and the political consolidation of Maui. The construction of the Kiha-a-Pi‘i-lani trail across the crater enhanced travel between distant island areas. (2). Following the collapse of Maui’s human populations during the late 1700s, and until the 20th century, came a period distinguished by scientific exploration of the crater, and intentional or accidental introductions of animals, including goats, horses, cattle, and wild dogs. (3). After Haleakalā became a National Park in 1916, efforts to eradicate introduced animals and to encourage the reproduction of silverswords and other plants were initiated. Unfortunately, in retrospect, construction of a modern paved road, improvement of hiking trails, and building of facilities allowed swift access to the Park and substantially increased tourist numbers, up to ~2 million yearly visitors. Faced with such crowds, the long-term planning of Park resources appears to be a formidable task.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Dynamics of Land Use/Land Cover Considering Ecosystem Services for a Dense-Population Watershed Based on a Hybrid Dual-Subject Agent and Cellular Automaton Modeling Approach
- Author
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Yutong Li, Yanpeng Cai, Qiang Fu, Xiaodong Zhang, Hang Wan, and Zhifeng Yang
- Subjects
Land use/land cover ,Human–environment interactions ,Agent-based model ,Cellular automaton ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
Land use/land cover represents the interactive and comprehensive influences between human activities and natural conditions, leading to potential conflicts among natural and human-related issues as well as among stakeholders. This study introduced economic standards for farmers. A hybrid approach (CA-ABM) of cellular automaton (CA) and an agent-based model (ABM) was developed to effectively deal with social and land-use synergic issues to examine human–environment interactions and projections of land-use conversions for a humid basin in south China. Natural attributes and socioeconomic data were used to analyze land use/land cover and its drivers of change. The major modules of the CA-ABM are initialization, migration, assets, land suitability, and land-use change decisions. Empirical estimates of the factors influencing the urban land-use conversion probability were captured using parameters based on a spatial logistic regression (SLR) model. Simultaneously, multicriteria evaluation (MCE) and Markov models were introduced to obtain empirical estimates of the factors affecting the probability of ecological land conversion. An agent-based CA-SLR-MCE-Markov (ABCSMM) land-use conversion model was proposed to explore the impacts of policies on land-use conversion. This model can reproduce observed land-use patterns and provide links for forest transition and urban expansion to land-use decisions and ecosystem services. The results demonstrated land-use simulations under multi-policy scenarios, revealing the usefulness of the model for normative research on land-use management.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Disentangling the complexity of human–nature interactions
- Author
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Elena M. Bennett and Belinda Reyers
- Subjects
complex adaptive systems ,cross‐scale dynamics ,human–environment interactions ,relational values ,social–ecological systems ,sustainable development ,Human ecology. Anthropogeography ,GF1-900 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Human–nature interactions have been identified as an important leverage point for achieving sustainability. Processes to recognize, protect, improve and reimagine human–nature interactions will be central to shift the world to more sustainable and equitable pathways and futures. In the context of the interconnected and rapidly changing Anthropocene, work on human–nature interactions must move beyond dominant linear assumptions of a relatively simple and easily and predictably manipulated world to acknowledge and engage with the complex, dynamic, asymmetrical and unequal nature of the interactions connecting people and nature. Based on three key features highlighted by the study of complex social–ecological systems (SES)—that these systems are relational, open and dynamic—we propose three new directions for the study and management of human–nature interactions that can help to acknowledge and disentangle the globally intertwined and dynamic nature of these interactions. These features suggest new directions and foci for sustainability science: the inseparable and relational qualities of the interactions between people and nature; the cross‐scale nature of these relationships; and the continuously evolving and changing form of these relationships. To bridge the gap between the theory of complex, inseparable and unequal human–nature interactions and the reductionist tendencies in research and practice, SES research raises opportunities to connect local action and global learning; to mobilize and develop new cross‐scale and relational capacities to encourage synergies and avoid trade‐offs; and to explore, experiment and learn our way forward onto more sustainable and equitable pathways. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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- 2024
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14. Deep-time patterns of sustainability and resilience in socio-ecological systems: An Introduction to the Special Issue.
- Author
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Daems, Dries, Cleymans, Sam, and Vandam, Ralf
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL sciences , *ARCHAEOLOGISTS , *SCHOLARLY method , *HISTORIANS , *LANDSCAPES - Abstract
As we stand on the precipice of unprecedented global challenges, understanding the deep-time patterns of sustainability and resilience is no longer just a scholarly endeavour but imperative for the future of our planet and its inhabitants. The collection of papers in this special issue brings together archaeologists, historians, and environmental scientists around four main topics: (1) social-ecological modelling, (2) long-term human-environment interactions, (3) modelling diachronic landscapes and (4) sustainability and resilience from past to future. Our aims are to come to a better understanding of socio-economic resilience and sustainability in past, present and future societies. Through interdisciplinary collaboration, we aim to forge new conceptual frameworks for understanding complex, long-term socio-ecological dynamics. Through the case studies, theoretical reflections and methodological innovations presented here, this special issue seeks to advance interdisciplinary scholarship on sustainability and resilience and offer fresh insights into the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead in building a sustainable future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Urban Visual Intelligence: Studying Cities with Artificial Intelligence and Street-Level Imagery.
- Author
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Zhang, Fan, Salazar-Miranda, Arianna, Duarte, Fábio, Vale, Lawrence, Hack, Gary, Chen, Min, Liu, Yu, Batty, Michael, and Ratti, Carlo
- Subjects
- *
URBAN studies , *BIG data , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature , *DEEP learning - Abstract
The visual dimension of cities has been a fundamental subject in urban studies since the pioneering work of late-nineteenth- to mid-twentieth-century scholars such as Camillo Sitte, Kevin Lynch, Rudolf Arnheim, and Jane Jacobs. Several decades later, big data and artificial intelligence (AI) are revolutionizing how people move, sense, and interact with cities. This article reviews the literature on the appearance and function of cities to illustrate how visual information has been used to understand them. A conceptual framework, urban visual intelligence, is introduced to systematically elaborate on how new image data sources and AI techniques are reshaping the way researchers perceive and measure cities, enabling the study of the physical environment and its interactions with the socioeconomic environment at various scales. The article argues that these new approaches would allow researchers to revisit the classic urban theories and themes and potentially help cities create environments that align with human behaviors and aspirations in today's AI-driven and data-centric era. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Re-engaging Foodways: Life-courses of Disconnection and Reconnection with Food, Environment, and Sociality in Hawai'i.
- Author
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von Seggern, Janne and von Poser, Anita
- Subjects
- *
SOCIALISM , *ENVIRONMENTAL literacy , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *IMPOVERISHMENT , *CREATIVE ability - Abstract
The article focuses on the centrality (and relationality) of food, environment, and sociality in the efforts of a group of education practitioners and learners on Hawai'i Island to create a more liveable future alongside and despite global, social, and ecological upheavals. The ethnographic material stems from an engaged anthropological research on environmental knowledge and 'āina-based education in Hawai'i in early 2022 and digital anthropological encounters established before and after the onsite phase. Within this article we hope to convey the idea that, while the education practitioners and learners draw from knowledge of an ancient food system and even 'restore' parts of it, they do not simply replicate the foodways of the past by implementing them one-to-one. Rather, in their re-engagements of past foodways, people create social transformations and move through transitions in innovative ways in order to navigate through a contemporary world of disconnection and reconnection, continuity and disruption, loss and innovation, impoverishment and empowerment, as well as powerlessness and creativity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Early Uses by Ancient Hawaiians, and Environmental, Geographical, and Ecological History, of Haleakalā Crater, East Maui.
- Author
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Pérez, Francisco Luis
- Subjects
INTRODUCED animals ,TRADITIONAL farming ,ANIMAL introduction ,WILD dogs ,ANIMAL reproduction ,ENVIRONMENTAL history - Abstract
This research assesses the environmental uses of Haleakalā Crater, and adjoining east Maui areas, by native Hawaiians during recent centuries, and evaluates the modern utilization of this volcanic depression. The study methods examine, and focus on, numerous historical and modern accounts and reports. Three historical periods were identified as follows: (1). A phase, from the ~1400s until contact with foreigners in 1778, characterized by the development of settlements, population expansion, the intensification of traditional agriculture, and the political consolidation of Maui. The construction of the Kiha-a-Pi'i-lani trail across the crater enhanced travel between distant island areas. (2). Following the collapse of Maui's human populations during the late 1700s, and until the 20th century, came a period distinguished by scientific exploration of the crater, and intentional or accidental introductions of animals, including goats, horses, cattle, and wild dogs. (3). After Haleakalā became a National Park in 1916, efforts to eradicate introduced animals and to encourage the reproduction of silverswords and other plants were initiated. Unfortunately, in retrospect, construction of a modern paved road, improvement of hiking trails, and building of facilities allowed swift access to the Park and substantially increased tourist numbers, up to ~2 million yearly visitors. Faced with such crowds, the long-term planning of Park resources appears to be a formidable task. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Valorizing Behavioral Research in Improvement of the Built Environment.
- Author
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Kebenei, Judy, Karanja, Dennis, Elnaggar, Rehab, and Mireri, Caleb
- Subjects
BEHAVIORAL research ,BUILT environment ,ARCHITECTURAL studios ,HUMAN behavior ,ARCHITECTURAL design ,HUMAN ecology - Abstract
Behavioral research investigates the link between human behavior and the natural and the built environment where the behaviors occur. In the ensuing interactions between human behavior and the environment, individuals change their environment, and, in turn, their behaviors are changed by their environment. This article addresses the problem that formal design processes have resulted in gaps between what users want and what professionals design for, and hence the need for spatial analysis. Traces in the physical environment that were consequences of user behaviors were documented. Case studies of the architectural design studios in three universities in Kenya were used. Observation of physical traces was used as a research technique. The study noted that the observed traces were indicators of use of the environment for prescribed activities, significant bad design, alteration of space, space abandonment, space abuse, and afforded appropriate and inappropriate activities and behaviors. The article discusses how the foregoing indicators can be used to improve the built environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Pre‐contact and post‐colonial ecological legacies shape Surinamese rainforests.
- Author
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Witteveen, Nina H., White, Cheryl, Sánchez‐Martínez, Barbara A., Philip, Annemarie, Boyd, Femke, Booij, Roemer, Christ, Reyan, Singh, Santosh, Gosling, William D., Piperno, Dolores R., and McMichael, Crystal N. H.
- Subjects
- *
FOREST resilience , *TROPICAL forests , *POSTCOLONIALISM , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *VEGETATION dynamics , *FIRE ecology - Abstract
Disturbances in tropical forests can have long‐lasting ecological impacts, but their manifestations (ecological legacies) in modern forests are uncertain. Many Amazonian forests bear the mark of past soil modifications, species enrichments, and fire events, but the trajectories of ecological legacies from the pre‐contact or post‐colonial period remain relatively unexplored. We assessed the fire and vegetation history from 15 soil cores ranging from 0 to 10 km from a post‐colonial Surinamese archaeological site. We show that (1) fires occurred from 96 bc to recent times and induced significant vegetation change, (2) persistent ecological legacies from pre‐contact and post‐colonial fire and deforestation practices were mainly within 1 km of the archaeological site, and (3) palm enrichment of Attalea, Oenocarpus and Astrocaryum occurred within 0, 1, and 8 km of the archaeological site, respectively. Our results challenge the notion of spatially extensive and persistent ecological legacies. Instead, our data indicate that the persistence and extent of ecological legacies are dependent on their timing, frequency, type, and intensity. Examining the mechanisms and manifestations of ecological legacies is crucial in assessing forest resilience and Indigenous and local land rights in the highly threatened Amazonian forests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Evaluating the relationships between climate change, population pressure, economic intensification, and childhood stress in the Prehispanic Nasca region of Peru.
- Author
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McCool, Weston C., Anderson, Amy S., Baide, Alexis Ja'net, Gonzalez, Toni, and Codding, Brian F.
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change & health , *CLIMATE change , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *AGRICULTURAL intensification , *PHYSIOLOGICAL stress , *LIFE history theory - Abstract
Climate change can adversely affect population health by limiting resource availability. Climate shocks may cause resource shortfalls directly via declining economic productivity, but favorable climate conditions may also create food shortages indirectly by promoting demographic growth that then pressures a resource base. Current population health and capacities for resilience reflect long-term human-environment interactions, highlighting the need for studies on the relationship between climate and population health through time. In this article, we combine theory from population ecology and life history with structural equation models to evaluate archaeological evidence of changing population health in response to climate change in the Nasca highlands of Peru from the terminal Middle Horizon to Late Intermediate period (1250 - 500 cal BP). Specifically, we examine potential causal chains between local precipitation, population growth, agricultural intensification, and two skeletal indicators of childhood physiological stress—cribra orbitalia (CO) and porotic hyperostosis (PH)—in 149 radiocarbon dated individuals. We find that higher precipitation has a positive indirect impact on PH frequency that is entirely mediated by local population pressure and maize agricultural intensification. Precipitation has a negative direct effect on CO, which is most common during intervals of extreme drought, low dietary maize inputs, and in periods of higher fertility. Additionally, we find that PH and CO negatively co-vary over time. These findings add to a growing body of evidence that, though PH and CO have historically been considered manifestations of the same pathological process, these two skeletal lesions likely result from distinct sources of physiological stress in the Prehispanic central Andes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Approach and Permanent Human Occupation of Mainland Portugal Coastal Zone (1096–2021).
- Author
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Bastos, Maria Rosário, Pereira, Olegário Nelson Azevedo, Ferreira, Antero, Salgado, Filipe, Lira, Sérgio, and Dias, João Alveirinho
- Subjects
HUMAN settlements ,COASTS ,HISTORICAL source material ,BEACHES ,LONGITUDE ,CENSUS - Abstract
This paper aims to enhance the understanding of the littoralization process in mainland Portugal over a broad chronological framework. Littoralization is defined as the occupation and settlement of human communities along the coast. In this case, the analysis was based on the synchronic analysis of three chronologies: from the formation of Portugal to the settlement of the fountains (1096–1325); at the dawn of modernity, marked by the Portuguese expansion (1500–1524), with the first scientific census (1860); and in the present, with data from the last census (2021). The choice of chronology was dictated by the historical sources available and allowed us to check the trend of population dispersion both in terms of latitude and longitude, the latter being the analysis of the distance of the main population centers (counties) from the coast. In the first chronological segment, there is a "safety distance" from the exposed coastlines, which is gradually blurred over time until there is an impressive coastal demographic concentration in 2021, with around 80% of people settled within 50 km of the sea. So, the management of Portugal's territory is an unequivocal indicator of the Anthropocene even with the risks of the disappearance of some beaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. How a multidimensional ecology education approach can enhance college curricula to implement the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
- Author
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Klemow, Kenneth M., Cid, Carmen R., Jablonski, Leanne M., and Haas, Don A.
- Subjects
COLLEGE curriculum ,ECOLOGY education ,SUSTAINABLE development ,NONFORMAL education ,ENVIRONMENTAL justice ,NATURAL resources management ,HEALTH literacy ,ECOLOGICAL modernization - Abstract
Copyright of Sustainable Earth Reviews is the property of BioMed Central 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
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Disentangling the complexity of human–nature interactions.
- Author
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Bennett, Elena M. and Reyers, Belinda
- Subjects
ACTIVE learning ,GLOBAL method of teaching ,PERIODICAL articles ,BLOGS - Abstract
Human–nature interactions have been identified as an important leverage point for achieving sustainability. Processes to recognize, protect, improve and reimagine human–nature interactions will be central to shift the world to more sustainable and equitable pathways and futures.In the context of the interconnected and rapidly changing Anthropocene, work on human–nature interactions must move beyond dominant linear assumptions of a relatively simple and easily and predictably manipulated world to acknowledge and engage with the complex, dynamic, asymmetrical and unequal nature of the interactions connecting people and nature.Based on three key features highlighted by the study of complex social–ecological systems (SES)—that these systems are relational, open and dynamic—we propose three new directions for the study and management of human–nature interactions that can help to acknowledge and disentangle the globally intertwined and dynamic nature of these interactions.These features suggest new directions and foci for sustainability science: the inseparable and relational qualities of the interactions between people and nature; the cross‐scale nature of these relationships; and the continuously evolving and changing form of these relationships.To bridge the gap between the theory of complex, inseparable and unequal human–nature interactions and the reductionist tendencies in research and practice, SES research raises opportunities to connect local action and global learning; to mobilize and develop new cross‐scale and relational capacities to encourage synergies and avoid trade‐offs; and to explore, experiment and learn our way forward onto more sustainable and equitable pathways. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Understanding Human–Environment Interactions Using Multiple Dimensions
- Author
-
Jagdish Krishnaswamy
- Subjects
Human–Environment Interactions ,Editorial ,Human ecology. Anthropogeography ,GF1-900 ,Economic theory. Demography ,HB1-3840 - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Assessing human well‐being constructs with environmental and equity aspects: A review of the landscape
- Author
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Erin C. Betley, Amanda Sigouin, Pua’ala Pascua, Samantha H. Cheng, Kenneth Iain MacDonald, Felicity Arengo, Yildiz Aumeeruddy‐Thomas, Sophie Caillon, Marney E. Isaac, Stacy D. Jupiter, Alexander Mawyer, Manuel Mejia, Alexandria C. Moore, Delphine Renard, Lea Sébastien, Nadav Gazit, and Eleanor J. Sterling
- Subjects
equity ,human–environment interactions ,human–environment interrelations ,nature ,social–ecological systems ,sustainability ,Human ecology. Anthropogeography ,GF1-900 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Decades of theory and scholarship on the concept of human well‐being have informed a proliferation of approaches to assess well‐being and support public policy aimed at sustainability and improving quality of life. Human well‐being is multidimensional, and well‐being emerges when the dimensions and interrelationships interact as a system. In this paper, we illuminate two crucial components of well‐being that are often excluded from policy because of their relative difficulty to measure and manage: equity and interrelationships between humans and the environment. We use a mixed‐methods approach to review and summarize progress to date in developing well‐being constructs (including frameworks and methods) that address these two components. Well‐being frameworks that do not consider the environment, or interrelationships between people and their environment, are not truly measuring well‐being in all its dimensions. Use of equity lenses to assess well‐being frameworks aligns with increasing efforts to more holistically characterize well‐being and to guide sustainability management in ethical and equitable ways. Based on the findings of our review, we identify several pathways forward for the development and implementation of well‐being frameworks that can inform efforts to leverage well‐being for public policy.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Editorial: Sustainable human- environment interactions from scientific, technological, and psychological perspectives
- Author
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Tien-Chi Huang, Tai-Kuei Yu, and Maria Limniou
- Subjects
sustainable development ,human-environment interactions ,psychological perspectives ,technological innovations ,cultural factors ,environmental communication ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The effects of shrub encroachment on arthropod communities depend on grazing history
- Author
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G. Losapio, C.M. De Moraes, V. Nickels, T. Tscheulin, N. Zouros, and M.C. Mescher
- Subjects
Biodiversity ,Disturbance ,Human–environment interactions ,Land-use change ,Insect communities ,Livestock overgrazing ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Unsustainable grazing is a major driver of biodiversity loss worldwide. Conservation actions such as grazing exclusion are effective strategies for halting such decline. However, we still know little how the long-term impact of grazing exclusion depends on plant–animal interactions such as those between encroaching unpalatable shrubs and ground arthropods. Here, we assessed how encroaching, unpalatable shrub species (Sarcopoterium spinosum) mediates the effects of grazing exclusion on the recovery of arthropod communities. We used a large-scale, long-term (15–25 years) grazing exclusion experiment complemented with local-scale treatments that consider the presence or absence of shrubs. We found that halting overgrazing supported the recovery of biodiversity in the long-term. Notably, the impacts of shrubs on arthropod diversity vary with grazing history. Shrubs decreased arthropod abundance by three folds, affecting particularly flies, butterflies, hymenopteran, and beetles in protected areas. Yet, shrubs had positive effects on animal diversity, particularly centipedes and millipeds in grazed areas. On the one hand, shrubs may enhance biodiversity recovery in overgrazed systems; on the other hand, shrubs may be detrimental in protected areas, in the absence of grazing. Understanding how plant–animal interactions vary with historical land-use change is key for biodiversity conservation and recovery and for integrated management of agroecosystems.
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
28. Mapping the Unheard: Analyzing Tradeoffs Between Fisheries and Offshore Wind Farms Using Multicriteria Decision Analysis.
- Author
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Song, Zhenlei, Chapman, Piers, Tao, Jian, Chang, Ping, Gao, Huilin, Liu, Honggao, Brannstrom, Christian, and Zhang, Zhe
- Subjects
- *
OFFSHORE wind power plants , *WIND power & the environment , *FISHERIES , *SOCIOCULTURAL factors , *SUSTAINABILITY , *MULTIPLE criteria decision making , *ANALYTIC hierarchy process - Abstract
Identifying offshore wind energy sites involves analyzing multiple variables, such as wind speed, proximity to the coastline, and sociocultural factors. This complex decision-making process often involves many stakeholders, resulting in conflicting data and goals. Decision analysis that promotes collaboration, transparency, understanding, and sustainability is key. This study presents a unique model of human–environment interaction that reconciles different perspectives and visualizes the balance between fisheries and wind power. Using three multicriteria decision models (weighted aggregated sum product assessment [WASPAS], technique for order of preference by similarity to ideal solution [TOPSIS], and analytical hierarchy process [AHP]), we analyze the decision mix for wind farm selection and assess the impacts on fisheries using historical data. Our approach was applied to an upwelling system in California, generating ten tailored decision scenarios for different stakeholder groups. The results showed that adaptation scores for specific call areas in northern California decreased when the weight of fishery factors increased, and there was a tendency for high-scoring areas to shift southward as fishery parameters increased. The results of the sensitivity analysis showed that the first-order sensitivity scores of WASPAS were better correlated with the weights compared to TOPSIS, whereas the second-order sensitivity scores were generally lower, indicating a reduced interdependence of our model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The Provence Coalfield: trajectory, assessment and prospective
- Author
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Daviet, Sylvie, Schleyer-Lindenmann, Alexandra, Raynal, Jean-Claude, Batteau, Pierre, and Noack, Yves
- Subjects
Alumina ,Coal ,Energy transition ,Human–environment interactions ,Interdisciplinarity ,Bassin Minier de Provence ,Reconversion ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
The trajectory taken by the Provence Coalfield (or Bassin Minier de Provence), located between Aix-en-Provence and Marseille, is explained by its long mining history, disrupted by the closure of the mine in 2003. We approach this space from a global perspective, considering the social, economic and environmental dimensions of the socio-ecosystem. The conclusion puts forward scenarios for the evolution of the territory and the perspectives for research, underlining the growing role of the energy transition, especially in the context of the closure of the coal-fired power plant.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Direct dating confirms the presence of otter and badger in early Holocene Ireland.
- Author
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Power, Robert C., Stuijts, Ingelise, McCormick, Finbar, and Talamo, Sahra
- Subjects
- *
HOLOCENE Epoch , *BADGERS , *MESOLITHIC Period , *RESEARCH personnel , *MAMMALS , *OTTERS - Abstract
The origin of Ireland's fauna is an unresolved issue in the history of the island. Although researchers once considered Ireland's mammals to have spread to Ireland during the early postglacial from 11,700 cal BP, research has increasingly suggested humans translocated many of these species to Ireland. However, due to sparse evidence, the origin of Ireland's purported native mustelid species remains unanswered. In this study, we shed light on the history of otter and badger in Ireland by directly dating suspected early examples of these species from Derragh, Co. Longford, a late Mesolithic campsite. The results demonstrate that both of these species have been present in Ireland for at least 7000–8000 years. It is not clear if they represent self-colonisers or Mesolithic anthropogenic translocations. Although these finds do not rule out local extinction and later reintroduction, they show that we can no longer assume they are solely late Holocene introductions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Assessing human well‐being constructs with environmental and equity aspects: A review of the landscape.
- Author
-
Betley, Erin C., Sigouin, Amanda, Pascua, Pua'ala, Cheng, Samantha H., MacDonald, Kenneth Iain, Arengo, Felicity, Aumeeruddy‐Thomas, Yildiz, Caillon, Sophie, Isaac, Marney E., Jupiter, Stacy D., Mawyer, Alexander, Mejia, Manuel, Moore, Alexandria C., Renard, Delphine, Sébastien, Lea, Gazit, Nadav, and Sterling, Eleanor J.
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL justice ,WELL-being ,GOVERNMENT policy ,LANDSCAPES - Abstract
Copyright of People & Nature is the property of Wiley-Blackwell 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.)
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- 2023
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32. Building a More Secure Territory Spatial Pattern in China: An Analysis Based on Human-Environment Interactions.
- Author
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Yi, Jialin, Yi, Dan, Tang, Yifeng, Guo, Jie, Ou, Minghao, and Cheng, Xianbo
- Subjects
INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,HUMAN ecology ,URBAN growth ,SPATIAL systems ,HUMAN beings - Abstract
To understand and respond to the common ecological and environmental challenges faced by human beings, this study investigated the relationship between territorial spatial development (TSD), eco-environmental responses, and territorial spatial planning (TSP) from the perspective of human-environment interactions and explores a feasible way to modulate these human-environment interactions by taking China's TSP practice as an illustrative case. The research results show that (1) the interplay between territorial development, resource utilization, and environmental feedback forms the crux of human-environment interactions. Notably, eco-environment responses, one of which is the spread of germs, coupled with human development and utilization behavior constitute a complete negative feedback loop. Human beings' adjustment to the unbalanced conditions in these interactions, employing institutions, technology, planning, and other tools, constitutes a positive cycle within human-environment interactions. (2) TSP can regulate the whole process of human-environment interactions through mechanisms such as coordination and control, adaptation and mitigation, and consolidation and restoration. (3) Unreasonable agricultural development and urban expansion have triggered intense negative feedback on the ecological environment. (4) The Chinese government has carried out a top-down TSP reform initiative to establish a unified planning system. This aims to alleviate the adverse ecological and environmental effects caused by TSD and build a more secure territory space pattern. Therefore, nations around the globe should innovate their spatial planning management systems and spatial planning systems, standardize and guide the development and utilization of spatial resources, and coordinate the relationship between humans and the environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Holocene geomorphodynamics of a rural catchment in the Pergamon micro-region (eastern Mediterranean).
- Author
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Yang, Xun, Becker, Fabian, Nykamp, Moritz, Ludwig, Bernhard, Doğan, Mehmet, and Schütt, Brigitta
- Subjects
- *
HOLOCENE Epoch , *SEDIMENTATION & deposition , *ALLUVIAL fans , *CLIMATE change , *PALEOPEDOLOGY - Abstract
The Pergamon micro-region (western Türkiye) has experienced several phases of increased geomorphodynamics during the Holocene. However, the role of local–regional human activities during a transformation between Hellenism and the Roman Imperial period and supra-regional climate fluctuations is still under discussion. Five sediment profiles from the alluvial fan of the rural Deliktaş catchment are analyzed and radiocarbon-dated to provide a sedimentological record covering the Holocene. Our results indicate seven phases of changing sediment dynamics. Five Holocene cycles of coarse- and fine-textured fan sediment deposition covered the paleochannel deposits of the Çaylak creek, and the floodplain sediments of the receiving Geyikli river which aggraded toward the piedmont during the Mid-Holocene. The landscape became stable on the Deliktaş fan and Geyikli floodplain at least ca. 4–3.4 cal ka BP as indicated by paleosols. These paleosols were again buried by fan sediments marking the first phase of accelerated geomorphodynamics during the Late Holocene. Both the local onset of human activities and the regional Mid-Holocene aridization with rapid climate changes play a role. The increased number of archeological sites and high human pressure on the environment during the Hellenistic–Roman transformation in the Deliktaş area and Pergamon micro-region were hypothesized to contribute to a phase of increased geomorphodynamic activity during the last 2.5 ka. This, however, is less apparent in our record. Our study emphasizes the importance of both, the climatic system and rural-urban cultural history, on landscape development, suggesting potential responses of locally diverse geomorphodynamics on regional-scale transformation in the eastern Mediterranean. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Conflict or Coordination? The Spatiotemporal Relationship Between Humans and Nature on the Qinghai‐Tibet Plateau.
- Author
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Liu, Haimeng, Cheng, Yi, Liu, Zhifeng, Li, Qirui, Zhang, Haiyan, and Wei, Wei
- Subjects
ECOSYSTEM services ,ECOSYSTEMS ,RESTORATION ecology ,CLIMATE change ,FRESH water ,ENVIRONMENTAL quality ,CITIES & towns ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
As the Earth's Third Pole and the Asian water tower, the Qinghai‐Tibet Plateau (QTP) plays a key role in global climate regulation and biodiversity maintenance. Living in harmony with nature is vital for local and global sustainable development. Current research on the conflicted or coordinated relationship between humans and nature on the QTP at a fine spatial scale remains limited. To fill the gap, we developed the human activity intensity index (HAI) and eco‐environmental quality index (EQI) at 1‐km resolution and proposed a four‐quadrant diagram approach to explore the dynamics between them. The results show a coordinated development on the QTP as the HAI and EQI both increased from 2000 to 2020, and the ratio of coordinated areas to conflicted areas was 5:1. High HAI areas were mainly in big cities such as Xining, Lhasa, Haidong, Xigaze, and along traffic lines. The significant conflicted areas were mainly outside the Lhasa metropolitan, south of the Hengduan Mountains, and along some new roads, and reduced by 8% between 2000–2010 and 2010–2020. The area of high HAI but low EQI was the smallest proportion, mainly in southern Qinghai Lake, southern Brahlung Zangbo River, Gobi oases, and western transport lines, but it implies the highest risk of ecosystem degradation. This research expands the fundamental methodology to address complex human‐natural relationships and provides implications for the sustainable development of fragile ecosystems. Plain Language Summary: The Qinghai‐Tibet Plateau (QTP), with an average altitude of over 4,000 m and 13 million residents, is the source of the nine rivers in Asia, providing fresh water, food, and other ecosystem services to more than 1.5 billion people, and is known as the Earth's Third Pole and Asian water tower. However, research on the relationship between humans and nature in that region is limited, especially at a fine spatial scale. To fill the gap, we developed the human activity intensity index (HAI) and eco‐environmental quality index (EQI) at 1‐km resolution and proposed a four‐quadrant diagram approach to explore the dynamics between them, addressing potential risks and sustainability pathways. We find that the relationship between humans and nature on the QTP tends to be harmonious from 2000 to 2020. The significant conflicted areas were mainly outside the Lhasa metropolitan, south of the Hengduan Mountains, and along new roads, and reduced by 8% between 2000–2010 and 2010–2020. However, the plateau's fragile ecosystem still faces great challenges with population growth, urbanization, infrastructure construction, and the threat of global climate change. This work expands the fundamental methodology and may support fine ecological restoration and environmental management for local governments. Key Points: Human activity intensity and eco‐environmental quality were measured at the grid scale of 1‐km resolution on the Earth's Third PoleWe proposed a four‐quadrant diagram approach to identify dynamic relationships between humans and natureSocioeconomic development and eco‐environment on the QTP tend to be coordinated during 2000–2020 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Assessing the risks of northeastern African archaeological heritage and their relationship to human–environmental processes: a Bayesian network approach.
- Author
-
Laguna-Palma, David, Palacios, Olga, and Mokránová, Katarína
- Subjects
- *
BAYESIAN analysis , *ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature , *URBAN growth , *PREDICTION models , *HYDROLOGY - Abstract
Preserving the archaeological heritage of North Africa is challenging due to unique anthropic and environmental processes. This study introduces a Bayesian network approach to model and evaluates the impact of regional anthropogenic actions and environmental conditions on the gradual disappearance of endangered archaeological heritage in the Marmarica region (northeastern Libya/northwestern Egypt). The predictive model quantifies the complex relationship among human–environment interactions involved in such processes, specifically addressing the nonlinear vulnerability of archaeological heritage to the convergence of different threats, such as climate change, urban development, or natural erosion. This model also enables us to explore patterns of association between anthropic remains (e.g. settlements, productive places, mobility structures, etc.) and environmental factors (e.g. topography, climate, hydrology, etc.), considering different co-occurring agents in these dynamics. Furthermore, the model can be applied to study such processes in other regions, enabling wider effective risk management and heritage preservation efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Prospects and Challenges of Using Drone-Based Participatory Mapping in Human–Environment Research.
- Author
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Dinko, Dinko Hanaan and Nyantakyi-Frimpong, Hanson
- Subjects
- *
AERIAL spraying & dusting in agriculture , *REMOTE sensing - Abstract
This article contributes to the emergent methodological application of uncrewed aerial vehicles (drones) in the study of human–environment interactions. Drawing on empirical field experiences, the article discusses the benefits and challenges of combining high spatial and temporal resolution drone remote sensing with qualitative in-depth interviews, focus group discussions, and community map validation workshops within a single study. The article argues that drone-based participatory mapping elicits deeper insights that are not apparent when remote sensing and conventional qualitative methods are used as stand-alone methods. By highlighting the prospects and challenges in using drone-based participatory mapping, this article contributes to debates on "socializing the pixel and pixeling the social," and advances methodological integration of qualitative and spatial analysis in the study of human–environment interactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Conflict or Coordination? The Spatiotemporal Relationship Between Humans and Nature on the Qinghai‐Tibet Plateau
- Author
-
Haimeng Liu, Yi Cheng, Zhifeng Liu, Qirui Li, Haiyan Zhang, and Wei Wei
- Subjects
human activities ,eco‐environmental quality ,human‐environment interactions ,coupled human and natural systems ,sustainable development ,Qinghai‐Tibet Plateau ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract As the Earth's Third Pole and the Asian water tower, the Qinghai‐Tibet Plateau (QTP) plays a key role in global climate regulation and biodiversity maintenance. Living in harmony with nature is vital for local and global sustainable development. Current research on the conflicted or coordinated relationship between humans and nature on the QTP at a fine spatial scale remains limited. To fill the gap, we developed the human activity intensity index (HAI) and eco‐environmental quality index (EQI) at 1‐km resolution and proposed a four‐quadrant diagram approach to explore the dynamics between them. The results show a coordinated development on the QTP as the HAI and EQI both increased from 2000 to 2020, and the ratio of coordinated areas to conflicted areas was 5:1. High HAI areas were mainly in big cities such as Xining, Lhasa, Haidong, Xigaze, and along traffic lines. The significant conflicted areas were mainly outside the Lhasa metropolitan, south of the Hengduan Mountains, and along some new roads, and reduced by 8% between 2000–2010 and 2010–2020. The area of high HAI but low EQI was the smallest proportion, mainly in southern Qinghai Lake, southern Brahlung Zangbo River, Gobi oases, and western transport lines, but it implies the highest risk of ecosystem degradation. This research expands the fundamental methodology to address complex human‐natural relationships and provides implications for the sustainable development of fragile ecosystems.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Toward spatial fit in the governance of global commodity flows.
- Author
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Coenen, Johanna, Sonderegger, Gabi, Newig, Jens, Meyfroidt, Patrick, Challies, Edward, Bager, Simon L., Busck-Lumholt, Louise M., Corbera, Esteve, Friis, Cecilie, Pedersen, Anna Frohn, Laroche, Perrine C. S. J., Paitan, Claudia Parra, Siyu Qin, Roux, Nicolas, and Zaehringer, Julie G.
- Subjects
- *
DUE diligence , *LAND use , *COMMERCIAL treaties , *FARM produce , *SUPPLY chains , *SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
Global commodity flows between distally connected social-ecological systems pose important challenges to sustainability governance. These challenges are partly due to difficulties in designing and implementing governance institutions that fit or match the scale of the environmental and social problems generated in such telecoupled systems. We focus on the spatial dimension of governance fit in relation to global commodity flows and telecoupled systems. Specifically, we draw on examples from land use and global agricultural commodity governance to examine two overarching types of governance mismatches: boundary mismatches and resolution mismatches. We argue that one way to address mismatches is through governance rescaling and illustrate this approach with reference to examples of three broad types of governance approaches: trade agreements, due diligence laws, and landscape approaches to supply chain governance. No single governance approach is likely to address all mismatches, highlighting the need to align multiple governance approaches to govern telecoupled systems effectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Mangrove Archives: Unravelling Human-environment Interactions from Deeply Buried Deposits at the Site Anse Trabaud, Martinique, Lesser Antilles (1290–780 cal BP).
- Author
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Hofman, Corinne L., Pagán-Jiménez, Jaime R., Field, Michael H., Hooghiemstra, Henry, Vermeer, Julijan A.M., Jorissen, Philippa, Knippenberg, Sebastiaan, Bérard, Benoît, and Hoogland, Menno L.P.
- Subjects
MANGROVE plants ,CLIMATE change ,SOCIAL participation ,HUMAN settlements ,ROGUE waves ,SOCIAL adjustment ,SOCIAL interaction ,MANGROVE ecology - Abstract
The site of Anse Trabaud on Martinique in the Windward Islands of the Lesser Antilles has yielded valuable information about human occupation from deep beneath its surface. The site is located in the southeastern part of the island, an area vulnerable to extreme wave events. The archaeological deposits are dated to 1290–780 cal BP (2σ). The earliest horizon is buried under thick layers of mangrove sediments. The deeply buried deposits have allowed excellent preservation of inorganic and organic remains providing an unexpected opportunity to reconstruct the paleoenvironmental conditions of past human settlement, and to study human-environment interactions and social adaptation to climate challenges in this part of the Caribbean archipelago. The cultural remains provide invaluable information into the exploitation of the surroundings of the site as well as into the subsistence patterns, material culture repertoires, procurement strategies and use and exchange of raw materials and tools. Additionally, the excellent preservation of organic materials offers new insights into food plants grown and harvested on-site, and then processed and consumed. The environmental challenges incited the Anse Trabaud community to adapt their settlement organisation and procurement strategies over time and underscore the importance of their participation in a regional and social network of mobility and exchange. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Vegetation changes and sediment dynamics in the Lake Alaotra region, central Madagascar.
- Author
-
Broothaerts, Nils, Razanamahandry, Vao Fenotiana, Brosens, Liesa, Campforts, Benjamin, Jacobs, Liesbet, Razafimbelo, Tantely, Rafolisy, Tovonarivo, Verstraeten, Gert, Bouillon, Steven, and Govers, Gerard
- Subjects
- *
LAKE sediments , *VEGETATION dynamics , *AGRICULTURE , *FLOODPLAINS , *GRASSLANDS , *WETLANDS - Abstract
Madagascar is known for its high erosion rates in the central highlands, yet the role of human disturbance versus natural processes is not well understood and is a topic of ongoing debate. At present the necessary quantitative data to couple vegetation dynamics and sediment fluxes over time in Madagascar is scarce. This study aims to provide more insight in vegetation changes and sediment transfers over the last millennia in the Lake Alaotra region, and specifically on the role of human disturbances and natural processes. Our vegetation reconstruction is based on pollen records from two lake sediment cores, covering the last 2600 years. Sediment accumulation rates were calculated from cores obtained from the floodplains, from wetlands surrounding the lake, and from Lake Alaotra itself. Our data show an early opening in the landscape, between 2050 and 1700 cal a BP, with a transition from a wooded grassland or woodland/grassland mosaic towards open grassland and an increase in charcoal accumulation rates. (Indirect) human impact is suggested as the main driver for these vegetation changes. Floodplain and wetland sediment accumulation rates only increase in the last 1000 years and peak in the last 400 years. This increased accumulation can mainly be linked to the increased anthropogenic pressure (grazing and farming activities) that triggered increased lavaka (gullies) activity. No changes in accumulation rate were observed in Lake Alaotra, indicating that most sediments are buffered in the floodplains and wetlands. Overall, our pollen and charcoal data suggest an indirect effect of human disturbance on vegetation shifts whilst strong evidence was found for a direct effect of human disturbance on sediment accumulation through intensified use of the grasslands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Mayan Urbanism: Impact on a Tropical Karst Environment.
- Author
-
Brenner, Mark
- Subjects
- *
KARST , *MAYAS , *CITIES & towns , *EARTH sciences , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL surveying , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL geology - Abstract
Deevey et al.'s (1979) Mayan Urbanism: Impact on a Tropical Karst Environment combined paleo-demographic data from the Lowland Maya region, obtained from archaeological survey and test-pitting, with paleolimnological data derived from local lakes, to evaluate the environmental impacts of long-term, ancient Maya agro-engineering activities in the region. The interdisciplinary approach to studying human-environment interactions was novel at the time and paved the way for many subsequent hybrid Earth Science/Archaeology projects in the Maya area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Phytolith assemblages reflect variability in human land use and the modern environment
- Author
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Witteveen, Nina H., White, Cheryl, Sanchez Martinez, Barbara A., Booij, Roemer, Philip, Annemarie, Gosling, William D., Bush, Mark B., and McMichael, Crystal N. H.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A Comprehensive Exploration of Earth’s Systems: Geography, Ecology, and Environmental Dynamics
- Author
-
Hassan Hamidi
- Subjects
air quality ,biodiversity ,ecosystems ,environmental sciences ,geography ,geomorphology ,human-environment interactions ,interdisciplinary collaboration ,landscape ecology ,sustainability ,Social Sciences - Abstract
This research paper navigates the intricate arras of Earth’s systems, synthesizing a comprehensive exploration spanning geographical landscapes, environmental sciences, and ecological studies. The journey unfolds through an interdisciplinary lens, unraveling the multifaceted dimensions that define the planet’s biodiversity, environmental health, and the complex interactions between human societies and the natural world. The exploration commences with a foundational understanding of geography, delving into climatology, cartography, and geo-morphology, laying the groundwork for comprehending Earth’s physical attributes and climatic dynamics. From this comprehensive foundation, the journey extends into the realm of landscape ecology, unraveling the inter-connectedness between spatial patterns, ecological processes, and biodiversity within ecosystems. The examination of pollution sources, air quality parameters, and their far-reaching implications on ecosystems and human health emphasizes the urgency of addressing environmental challenges through interdisciplinary approaches. Moreover, the exploration unfolds into the complexities of environmental change and biodiversity loss, illuminating the ongoing alterations in landscapes and their dire implications for Earth’s ecosystems. The investigation into geomagnetic and geo-electric fields sheds light on their profound influence on Earth’s systems, underscoring the imperative role of understanding and safeguarding these natural phenomena. Furthermore, the exploration extends into the realms of oceanography, bio-geo-chemical cycles, soil science, and remote sensing, encompassing diverse domains essential for comprehending Earth’s environmental dynamics. The culmination of this comprehensive exploration signifies the inter-connectedness of diverse disciplines and calls for global cooperation, interdisciplinary collaboration, and a commitment to sustainable practices. The synthesis of knowledge navigates through implications fostering scientific advancements, environmental conservation, policy formulation, interdisciplinary collaboration, and technological innovations, underscoring the pivotal role of humanity in fostering a sustainable coexistence with the intricate tapestry of life on Earth.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Charcoal source area in a landscape dominated by human fire use: Conecuh National Forest, Alabama, USA.
- Author
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Vachula, Richard S and Waters, Matthew N
- Subjects
- *
PRESCRIBED burning , *FOREST reserves , *CHARCOAL , *STEROLS , *POLLEN - Abstract
Sedimentary charcoal is the most ubiquitous paleofire proxy, yet uncertainties remain in our ability to interpret it. Particularly, charcoal source area and the distinguishability of charcoal signals from human-caused versus wildfire remain persistent areas of ongoing research. This paper focuses on sedimentary charcoal data from Ditch Pond, a small lake located in the Conecuh National Forest (NF) of southern Alabama, USA, where prescribed fire (Rx-fire) dominates the landscape. We compare charcoal accumulation rate data from Ditch Pond with historical fire data to determine the charcoal source area of Ditch Pond and its human-dominated fire activity. We find that the relevant charcoal source area of Ditch Pond is ~40 km, a magnitude consistent with previous source area estimates in wildfire-dominated landscapes. This finding suggests that human-caused and natural fire are spatially indistinguishable in paleofire records. However, our results conform with the common interpretation that although human impacts on fire may be detected locally (i.e. via comparison with other proxies like fecal sterols, archeological data, or pollen), they are unlikely to be distinguishable on broader spatial scales from climate-driven wildfire. Therefore, our results support using multi-proxy, spatial, or modeling approaches (e.g. to simulate the spatial self-similarity of wildfire) as comparative means of identifying human components of charcoal records. Last, our results are at odds with the traditional conceptualizations of primarily localized charcoal source areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Predicting the geographic distribution of ancient Amazonian archaeological sites with machine learning.
- Author
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Walker, Robert S., Ferguson, Jeffrey R., Olmeda, Angelica, Hamilton, Marcus J., Elghammer, Jim, and Buchanan, Briggs
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,MACHINE learning ,ANTHROPOGENIC soils ,WATERSHEDS ,EARTHWORK ,COASTS - Abstract
Amazonia has as least two major centers of ancient human social complexity, but the full geographic extents of these centers remain uncertain. Across the southern rim of Amazonia, over 1,000 earthwork sites comprised of fortified settlements, mound villages, and ditched enclosures with geometric designs known as geoglyphs have been discovered. Qualitatively distinct and densely located along the lower stretches of major river systems and the Atlantic coast are Amazonian Dark Earth sites (ADEs) with deep anthropogenic soils enriched by long-term human habitation. Models predicting the geographic extents of earthworks and ADEs can assist in their discovery and preservation and help answer questions about the full degree of indigenous landscape modifications across Amazonia. We classify earthworks versus ADEs versus other nonearthwork/ non-ADE archaeological sites with multi-class machine learning algorithms using soils, climate, and distances to rivers of different types and sizes as geospatial predictors. Model testing is done with spatial cross-validation, and the best model at the optimal spatial scale of 1 km has an Area Under the Curve of 0.91. Our predictive model has led to the discovery of 13 new geoglyphs, and it pinpoints specific areas with high probabilities of undiscovered archaeological sites that are currently hidden by rainforests. The limited, albeit impressive, predicted extents of earthworks and ADEs means that other non-ADE/non-earthwork sites are expected to predominate most of Western and Northern Amazonia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Barriers to Native Plantings in Private Residential Yards.
- Author
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Davis, Amélie and Stoyko, Jessica
- Subjects
NATIVE plants ,TREE care ,POLLINATORS ,MONARCH butterfly ,HOST plants ,SPECIES ,BIRD classification - Abstract
In urban areas, private yards can make up large portions of the available "green space" which can be used to provide resources for many species, including birds, and pollinators. If residents are persuaded or willing to plant certain native plants, the aggregate effect of these plantings could be hugely beneficial for key pollinator species. The objectives of this study are to uncover impediments to adding different types of pollinator-beneficial plants to private yards, as well as ascertain which incentives to plant these native plants might be most persuasive, and finally determine if there are procedural knowledge gaps in how to plant, care for, or where to purchase three pollinator-beneficial plants. In this study, we randomly selected properties in two counties in southwestern Ohio along two gradients: parcel size and parcel valuation (as a proxy for income). Two hundred surveys were distributed and 113 were returned (57% response rate). We find that, in aggregate, respondents do not have a strong intent to plant these native plants, especially Asclepias syriaca (a milkweed that serves as host plant to the iconic monarch butterfly; Danaus plexippus) and, surprisingly, the intent to plant these does not differ statistically even when help with costs, labor, or the provision of online resources are offered. We also find that the reported knowledge of where to purchase wildflowers is significantly higher than how to care for them and how to plant them. Lastly, respondents are much more confident in how to take care of trees compared to the three pollinator-beneficial plants shown in the survey. We discuss the implications of these findings for outreach and extension purposes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The landscape of the Late Bronze Age royal tomb of Seddin (NE Germany): linking geomorphology, archaeology, and historic evidence
- Author
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Moritz Nykamp, Stephanie Hauschulz, Jacob Hardt, Daniel Knitter, Jens May, and Philipp Hoelzmann
- Subjects
late quaternary geomorphology ,human–environment interactions ,legacies of historic land use ,geoarchaeology ,peat record from late mis 3 (weichselian pleniglacial) ,royal tomb of seddin ,Maps ,G3180-9980 - Abstract
The monumental Late Bonze Age royal tomb of Seddin is located in the old morainic landscape of the Prignitz region, northeastern Germany. Together with other richly equipped burials and a row of stone pits in its direct vicinity, it provides evidence for the presence of an elite from the nineth to sixth centuries BCE in this region. Our map emphasizes the well-chosen location of the royal tomb in relation to the spatial arrangement of other archaeological monuments that together form an ensemble of a ritual landscape. We trace legacies of land use from the Bronze Age to the present against the backdrop of Late Quaternary landscape evolution. These include the Bronze Age landscape (re-)organization for ritual and economic purposes, its medieval use for arable farming, its economic use and settlement history in historic times, and modern times melioration of agricultural areas that together form the palimpsest of the present-day landscape.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Building a More Secure Territory Spatial Pattern in China: An Analysis Based on Human-Environment Interactions
- Author
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Jialin Yi, Dan Yi, Yifeng Tang, Jie Guo, Minghao Ou, and Xianbo Cheng
- Subjects
human-environment interactions ,territory spatial development ,territory spatial planning ,territory spatial pattern ,Agriculture - Abstract
To understand and respond to the common ecological and environmental challenges faced by human beings, this study investigated the relationship between territorial spatial development (TSD), eco-environmental responses, and territorial spatial planning (TSP) from the perspective of human-environment interactions and explores a feasible way to modulate these human-environment interactions by taking China’s TSP practice as an illustrative case. The research results show that (1) the interplay between territorial development, resource utilization, and environmental feedback forms the crux of human-environment interactions. Notably, eco-environment responses, one of which is the spread of germs, coupled with human development and utilization behavior constitute a complete negative feedback loop. Human beings’ adjustment to the unbalanced conditions in these interactions, employing institutions, technology, planning, and other tools, constitutes a positive cycle within human-environment interactions. (2) TSP can regulate the whole process of human-environment interactions through mechanisms such as coordination and control, adaptation and mitigation, and consolidation and restoration. (3) Unreasonable agricultural development and urban expansion have triggered intense negative feedback on the ecological environment. (4) The Chinese government has carried out a top-down TSP reform initiative to establish a unified planning system. This aims to alleviate the adverse ecological and environmental effects caused by TSD and build a more secure territory space pattern. Therefore, nations around the globe should innovate their spatial planning management systems and spatial planning systems, standardize and guide the development and utilization of spatial resources, and coordinate the relationship between humans and the environment.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Social Memory in the Mekong's Changing Floodscapes: Narratives of Agrarian Communities' Adaptation.
- Author
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Tran, Thong Anh, Rigg, Jonathan, Taylor, David, Miller, Michelle Ann, Pittock, Jamie, and Le, Phong Thanh
- Subjects
- *
COLLECTIVE memory , *COMMUNITIES , *PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation , *FLOODPLAINS , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Rural adaptation encompasses place-based perceptions, behaviors, livelihoods, and traditional ways of life associated with local environments. These perceptions, norms, and practices are disturbed by coupled environment-development externalities. This study employs the Vietnamese Mekong floodplains as an exemplary case to illustrate how floods impact agrarian communities and how they have experienced flood alterations driven by hydropower development and climate change in recent years. Drawing on thematic and narrative analyses of qualitative data (focus group discussions and interviews) collected in three agrarian communities in the Vietnamese Mekong floodplains, sources drawn from various news outlets, and academic materials, we argue that disrupted flood environments in the floodplains have triggered affective flood reminiscences, catalysing shifts to incremental and transformative adaptation to achieve resilience. We build a nuanced understanding of how social memory helps to enhance human–environment relationships in response to highly complex hydrological dynamics in the delta. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Human-ecodynamics and the intertidal zones of the Zanzibar Archipelago
- Author
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Patrick Faulkner, Akshay Sarathi, Alison Crowther, Tam Smith, Matthew Harris, Abdallah K. Ali, Othman Haji, Adria LaViolette, Neil L. Norman, Mark Horton, and Nicole Boivin
- Subjects
archaeomalacology ,intertidal foraging ,marine subsistence ,human-environment interactions ,eastern Africa ,Science - Abstract
The intertidal zone, covering the nearshore fringe of coasts and islands and extending from the high-water mark to areas that remain fully submerged, encompasses a range of habitats containing resources that are as important to modern populations as they were to humans in prehistory. Effectively bridging land and sea, intertidal environments are extremely dynamic, requiring complexity and variability in how people engaged with them in the past, much as they do in the present. Here we review and reconsider environmental, archaeological, and modern socio-ecological evidence from the Zanzibar Archipelago on eastern Africa’s Swahili coast, focusing on marine molluscs to gain insight into the trajectories of human engagement with nearshore habitats and resources. We highlight the potential drivers of change and/or stability in human-intertidal interactions through time and space, set against a backdrop of the significant socio-economic and socio-ecological changes apparent in the archipelago, and along the Swahili coast, during the late Holocene.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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