Climate Change Archaeology
Building Resilience from Research in the World's Coastal Wetlands
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:31st Oct '13
Should be back in stock very soon
It is beyond doubt that the climate is changing, presenting us with one of the biggest challenges in the twenty-first-century. During the past 150 years, archaeologists have studied the impact of climate change on humanity; however, this information has not yet been used when considering the impact climate change will have on future human communities. This pioneering study addresses this major paradox in modern climate change research, and provides the theoretical basis for archaeological data to be included in climate change debates - an approach which uses archaeological research as a repository of ideas and concepts which can help build the resilience of modern communities against the background of rapid climate change. Applying this approach to four case study areas, which will be among the first to be significantly affected by climate change - the coastal wetlands of the North Sea, the Sundarbans, Florida's Gulf Coast, and the Iraqi Marshland, this comparative study illustrates the diversity of adaptive pathways implemented in times of climate change in the past and how these can help prepare modern communities.
a significant addition to existing research * Current World Archaeology *
There are plenty of shelves with space for this bookânot only of scholars and students of archaeology and climate change, but also managers and policy makers. * Jonathan Benjamin, Antiquity *
ISBN: 9780199699551
Dimensions: 237mm x 163mm x 22mm
Weight: 658g
288 pages