1. Inland sea as a unit for environmental history: East Asian inland seas from prehistory to future.
- Author
-
Lindstrom K and Uchiyama J
- Subjects
- Animals, Asia, Culture, Human Activities, Humans, Pacific Ocean, Conservation of Natural Resources methods, Environmental Monitoring methods, Geological Phenomena, Paleontology
- Abstract
The boundaries of landscape policies often coincide with political or economic boundaries, thus creating a situation where a unit of landscape protection or management reflects more its present political status than its historico-geographical situation, its historical function and formation. At the same time, it is evident that no unit can exist independently of the context that has given birth to it and that environmental protection in isolated units cannot be very effective. The present paper will discuss inland sea as a landscape unit from prehistory to modern days and its implications for future landscape planning, using EastAsian inland sea (Japan Sea and East China Sea) rim as an example. Historically an area of active communication, EastAsian inland sea rim has become a politically very sharply divided area. The authors will bring examples to demonstrate how cultural communication on the inland sea level has influenced the formation of several landscape features that are now targets for local or national landscape protection programs, and how a unified view could benefit the future of landscape policies in the whole region.
- Published
- 2012