scholarly journals Fish- and Shellmiddens from Galicia (Northwest Spain): Reflections upon a Neglected Coastal Cultural Heritage from the Iberian Peninsula

Humanities ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 85
Author(s):  
de Agüero ◽  
Fernández-Rodríguez ◽  
Roselló-Izquierdo ◽  
Llorente-Rodriguez ◽  
Bejega-García ◽  
...  

The physiographical features of the Galician sea, in particular its temperature, marine currents and plankton richness, have turned its waters into one of the most biologically diversified marine regions of the planet. The 1500 km of shorelines from this Northwest Iberian region are dotted with rías (Galician fjords) where settlements devoted to fishing and trade have existed since prehistoric times. These activities left abundant testimonies in terms of archaeological deposits. In recent decades, urban/industrial development, as well as a number of natural agents (e.g., storms, sea level rise, climate change), is rapidly erasing the evidences of this rich cultural heritage. Loss of fish and shellmiddens in particular will hamper our ability to infer traditional lifeways, doing away with evidence that is crucial to monitoring past climatic changes and to inferring those biological conditions under which marine species and coastal populations thrived in the past. This paper surveys some issues dealing with the coastal bio-archaeological heritage of Galicia, and the risks these deposits face. It concludes with a proposal to save this increasingly threatened marine heritage.

2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 343-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vally Koubi

The link between climate change and conflict has been discussed intensively in academic literature during the past decade. This review aims to provide a clearer picture of what the research community currently has to say with regard to this nexus. It finds that the literature has not detected a robust and general effect linking climate to conflict onset. Substantial agreement exists that climatic changes contribute to conflict under some conditions and through certain pathways. In particular, the literature shows that climatic conditions breed conflict in fertile grounds: in regions dependent on agriculture and in combination and interaction with other socioeconomic and political factors such as a low level of economic development and political marginalization. Future research should continue to investigate how climatic changes interact with and/or are conditioned by socioeconomic, political, and demographic settings to cause conflict and uncover the causal mechanisms that link these two phenomena.


2018 ◽  
Vol 64 (No. 3) ◽  
pp. 139-147 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khaleghi Mohammad Reza

The present study tends to describe the survey of climatic changes in the case of the Bojnourd region of North Khorasan, Iran. Climate change due to a fragile ecosystem in semi-arid and arid regions such as Iran is one of the most challenging climatological and hydrological problems. Dendrochronology, which uses tree rings to their exact year of formation to analyse temporal and spatial patterns of processes in the physical and cultural sciences, can be used to evaluate the effects of climate change. In this study, the effects of climate change were simulated using dendrochronology (tree rings) and an artificial neural network (ANN) for the period from 1800 to 2015. The present study was executed using the Quercus castaneifolia C.A. Meyer. Tree-ring width, temperature, and precipitation were the input parameters for the study, and climate change parameters were the outputs. After the training process, the model was verified. The verified network and tree rings were used to simulate climatic parameter changes during the past times. The results showed that the integration of dendroclimatology and an ANN renders a high degree of accuracy and efficiency in the simulation of climate change. The results showed that in the last two centuries, the climate of the study area changed from semiarid to arid, and its annual precipitation decreased significantly.


Polar Record ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia Olsen

Abstract Throughout the past two decades, the number of studies examining the adaptive capacity of Arctic communities in the context of climate change has been increasing; however, little is known about Arctic communities’ ability to adapt to certain emerging changes, such as increased shipping activity. To address this knowledge gap, this study systematically analyses published scientific articles on community adaptive capacity in circumpolar Arctic, including articles published in Russian which may not be captured in English-only reviews. Throughout this review, the study focuses on three areas: the development of the adaptive capacity framework; the conditions that enable community adaption abilities; and the extent to which shipping developments are addressed in the literature. This study demonstrates that the adaptive capacity framework has been significantly developed both theoretically and methodologically and is broadly used to address new types of climatic and non-climatic changes. Though the impacts from the shipping development are discussed in some studies, there is a clear need for further examination of coastal communities’ ability to adapt to such changes. Additionally, the study reveals limitations in the application of the Western conceptual terminology when exploring community-based research by Russian scholars.


Author(s):  
Oya Topçuoğlu

Museum shops everywhere sell merchandise inspired by artifacts in museum collections. But to access this merchandise one must visit the museum itself or its website. What if people encountered elegant objects exquisitely decorated with imagery from world-renowned artifacts and archaeological sites from their own lands when they went shopping for teacups or salad bowls? Would it enhance their understanding, change their perception, or increase their interest in their country’s past? This chapter explores the use of archaeological heritage in Turkey in the creation of the “Anatolian Civilizations” and “World Heritage” collections by Paşabahçe, Turkey’s first and the world’s third largest producer of glassware. Embodying the company’s mission to “preserve Anatolia’s cultural heritage for future generations,” these collections of decorative objects representing canonical artifacts and ancient sites from Anatolia aim to introduce the region’s archaeological heritage to a wider audience. However, produced in limited editions with price tags between $75 and $350, they are within the reach of only a small, educated, urban group.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-94
Author(s):  
I Made Sutaba

Archaeological research in Indonesia until the present days, has successfully discovered a diverse historical and archaeological heritage, which are classified as cultural heritage. This cultural heritage is an advice and source of historical information of the past life of the pluralistic Indonesiain ancestor. This cultural heritage beared problems, namely the aspect of typology, sociology and ideology in its contextual relationship that are unlikely to study it now. This research concentrates on the subjects in its relationship to the historical of the past and its relevance to the future of the nation building that not yet studied before. This research is a preliminary study concerning the historical messages of the past. The purpose of this research is to find out the answer of the problems. This research is done through library study for collecting data and the analysis was carried out using typological approach. The result of this study indicater a significance messages are the historical counsciousness, sense of nationalism, and its fundamental relevance for building the future of Indonesian nation. So far it is impossible to get the complete historical messages and sense of nationalism due to it characters such as incomplete, fragile, finite and so on.  


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 1-4
Author(s):  
Maja Gori ◽  
Alessandro Pintucci ◽  
Martina Revello Lami

 On the 23rd of August 2015 Daesh blew up the 2,000-year-old Baal-Shamin temple in the world-famous Greco-Roman site of Palmyra. This event triggered a profound emotional reaction in society at large, and the ruins soon became an iconic symbol of world heritage in danger. The appalling images of the ruins of Baal Shamin reinforced the perception, especially among western observers, that protecting cultural and natural heritage is yet another duty in the fight against terrorism. A similar international outcry occurred in 2001, when the Buddhas of Bamiyan fell to Taliban dynamite in Afghanistan, and when Iraqi museums and sites were ransacked and looted providing two of the most recent and vivid examples of destroyed heritage in the so-called War on Terror which was launched by the U.S. government after 9/11. Following the destruction at Baal-Shamin, UNESCO declared that the deliberate destruction of Syria's cultural heritage was a war crime, and put into motion several projects and actions aimed at preserving endangered Syrian archaeological heritage. At the same time, alongside income gained from the sale of drug and weapons, the trafficking of antiquities from Syria and Iraq worldwide provided a major source of revenue for Daesh.


2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (6) ◽  
pp. 836-863 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie Erev

Climate change is more than a discrete issue demanding political attention and response. A changing climate permeates political life as material processes of planetary change reverberate in our bodies, affecting subterranean processes of attention and evoking bodily responses at and below the register of awareness. By way of example, I explore the register of bodily feeling to raise the possibility that proliferating anomalies in atmospheric, oceanic, and seismic activities are entering into subliminal experiences of time and confounding embodied expectations of how the future is likely to flow from the past. The essay concludes with a preliminary discussion of how micropolitical strategies to amplify visceral experiences of climatic changes might valuably contribute to larger programs for climate action.


2021 ◽  
pp. 152-158
Author(s):  
Ben Mans

Abstract This expert option discusses the impact of past climatic change events on tick evolution. It also provides insights into how future climatic changes can impact the evolution and biogeographic distribution of ticks and the prevalence of tick-borne diseases.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Cendrero ◽  
Juan Remondo ◽  
Luis Forte

<p>Changes occurred in denudation/sedimentation processes (understood here as the transfer of solid materials from one place of the earth’s surface to another, by different agents) in the latter part of the Holocene, mainly the last couple of centuries, are examined, trying to estimate rates and assess the role of human and natural agents. Three issues are addressed here, on the basis of some case studies: slope movements and their contribution to denudation and relief evolution; “technological denudation” due to human activities; general evolution of sediment accumulation (consequence of denudation).</p><p>Analyses of materials transfer by, and frequency of, slope movements in N Spain have shown the importance of human influence already in Neolithic times, and more so after the Industrial Revolution. Significant increases have been observed since the middle of last century and slope movements seem to be in some cases the main factor of relief evolution.</p><p>Human activities related to urban-industrial development, infrastructure and mining activities represent an important “human geomorphic footprint” (expressed as volume of materials displaced or area occupied by new “anthropogeoforms”; yearly total or per capita). If the materials thus moved were evenly distributed over all emerged lands they could be presently equivalent to a >1 mm a<sup>-1</sup> (“technological”) denudation. As this is the consequence of growing population, technological and economic development, it will probably intensify with time.</p><p>Sedimentation rates directly determined (Pb-210, Cs-137) in a number of estuaries, lakes and reservoirs show in general a clear increase since early 20<sup>th</sup> century, particularly after its middle. Compilation and analysis of sedimentation rates in a variety of sedimentation environments in different regions of the world, since late 19<sup>th</sup> century, also show, with almost no exception, a similar trend. Comparison with rainfall evolution does not explain the changes observed. However, indicators of the intensity of human activity, especially GDP (Gross Domestic Product; total, not per capita; strongly related to our capacity to transform land), show a good similarity with sedimentation rates trends. This indicator also shows a close correlation with geomorphic disasters frequency (another manifestation of the general intensification of geomorphic processes).</p><p>On the basis of the information gathered and results presented, some tentative conclusions are proposed. It appears that presently humans are, by far, the main denudation agent. Direct and indirect transfer of rock, soil and sediment by human activities could be one order of magnitude greater than by natural agents. The rates of some geomorphic processes seem to have experienced a significant acceleration (about tenfold?) in less than a century, due to land surface transformation rather than to climate change. This “great geomorphic acceleration” represents a part of the “Great Acceleration” occurred after mid-twentieth century. Global geomorphic change (independent of climate change) should thus be considered as one of the characteristics of the Anthropocene, for which the end of World War II would indeed be an appropriate starting date.</p>


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